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Differential Roles of the Two Raphe Nuclei in Amiable Social Behavior and Aggression – An Optogenetic Study

Serotonergic mechanisms hosted by raphe nuclei have important roles in affiliative and agonistic behaviors but the separate roles of the two nuclei are poorly understood. Here we studied the roles of the dorsal (DR) and median raphe region (MRR) in aggression by optogenetically stimulating the two n...

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Autores principales: Balázsfi, Diána, Zelena, Dóra, Demeter, Kornél, Miskolczi, Christina, Varga, Zoltán K., Nagyváradi, Ádám, Nyíri, Gábor, Cserép, Csaba, Baranyi, Mária, Sperlágh, Beáta, Haller, József
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6082963/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30116182
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2018.00163
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author Balázsfi, Diána
Zelena, Dóra
Demeter, Kornél
Miskolczi, Christina
Varga, Zoltán K.
Nagyváradi, Ádám
Nyíri, Gábor
Cserép, Csaba
Baranyi, Mária
Sperlágh, Beáta
Haller, József
author_facet Balázsfi, Diána
Zelena, Dóra
Demeter, Kornél
Miskolczi, Christina
Varga, Zoltán K.
Nagyváradi, Ádám
Nyíri, Gábor
Cserép, Csaba
Baranyi, Mária
Sperlágh, Beáta
Haller, József
author_sort Balázsfi, Diána
collection PubMed
description Serotonergic mechanisms hosted by raphe nuclei have important roles in affiliative and agonistic behaviors but the separate roles of the two nuclei are poorly understood. Here we studied the roles of the dorsal (DR) and median raphe region (MRR) in aggression by optogenetically stimulating the two nuclei. Mice received three 3 min-long stimulations, which were separated by non-stimulation periods of 3 min. The stimulation of the MRR decreased aggression in a phasic-like manner. Effects were rapidly expressed during stimulations, and vanished similarly fast when stimulations were halted. No carryover effects were observed in the subsequent three trials performed at 2-day intervals. No effects on social behaviors were observed. By contrast, DR stimulation rapidly and tonically promoted social behaviors: effects were present during both the stimulation and non-stimulation periods of intermittent stimulations. Aggressive behaviors were marginally diminished by acute DR stimulations, but repeated stimulations administered over 8 days considerably decreased aggression even in the absence of concurrent stimulations, indicating the emergence of carryover effects. No such effects were observed in the case of social behaviors. We also investigated stimulation-induced neurotransmitter release in the prefrontal cortex, a major site of aggression control. MRR stimulation rapidly but transiently increased serotonin release, and induced a lasting increase in glutamate levels. DR stimulation had no effect on glutamate, but elicited a lasting increase of serotonin release. Prefrontal serotonin levels remained elevated for at least 2 h subsequent to DR stimulations. The stimulation of both nuclei increased GABA release rapidly and transiently. Thus, differential behavioral effects of the two raphe nuclei were associated with differences in their neurotransmission profiles. These findings reveal a surprisingly strong behavioral task division between the two raphe nuclei, which was associated with a nucleus-specific neurotransmitter release in the prefrontal cortex.
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spelling pubmed-60829632018-08-16 Differential Roles of the Two Raphe Nuclei in Amiable Social Behavior and Aggression – An Optogenetic Study Balázsfi, Diána Zelena, Dóra Demeter, Kornél Miskolczi, Christina Varga, Zoltán K. Nagyváradi, Ádám Nyíri, Gábor Cserép, Csaba Baranyi, Mária Sperlágh, Beáta Haller, József Front Behav Neurosci Neuroscience Serotonergic mechanisms hosted by raphe nuclei have important roles in affiliative and agonistic behaviors but the separate roles of the two nuclei are poorly understood. Here we studied the roles of the dorsal (DR) and median raphe region (MRR) in aggression by optogenetically stimulating the two nuclei. Mice received three 3 min-long stimulations, which were separated by non-stimulation periods of 3 min. The stimulation of the MRR decreased aggression in a phasic-like manner. Effects were rapidly expressed during stimulations, and vanished similarly fast when stimulations were halted. No carryover effects were observed in the subsequent three trials performed at 2-day intervals. No effects on social behaviors were observed. By contrast, DR stimulation rapidly and tonically promoted social behaviors: effects were present during both the stimulation and non-stimulation periods of intermittent stimulations. Aggressive behaviors were marginally diminished by acute DR stimulations, but repeated stimulations administered over 8 days considerably decreased aggression even in the absence of concurrent stimulations, indicating the emergence of carryover effects. No such effects were observed in the case of social behaviors. We also investigated stimulation-induced neurotransmitter release in the prefrontal cortex, a major site of aggression control. MRR stimulation rapidly but transiently increased serotonin release, and induced a lasting increase in glutamate levels. DR stimulation had no effect on glutamate, but elicited a lasting increase of serotonin release. Prefrontal serotonin levels remained elevated for at least 2 h subsequent to DR stimulations. The stimulation of both nuclei increased GABA release rapidly and transiently. Thus, differential behavioral effects of the two raphe nuclei were associated with differences in their neurotransmission profiles. These findings reveal a surprisingly strong behavioral task division between the two raphe nuclei, which was associated with a nucleus-specific neurotransmitter release in the prefrontal cortex. Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-08-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6082963/ /pubmed/30116182 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2018.00163 Text en Copyright © 2018 Balázsfi, Zelena, Demeter, Miskolczi, Varga, Nagyváradi, Nyíri, Cserép, Baranyi, Sperlágh and Haller. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Balázsfi, Diána
Zelena, Dóra
Demeter, Kornél
Miskolczi, Christina
Varga, Zoltán K.
Nagyváradi, Ádám
Nyíri, Gábor
Cserép, Csaba
Baranyi, Mária
Sperlágh, Beáta
Haller, József
Differential Roles of the Two Raphe Nuclei in Amiable Social Behavior and Aggression – An Optogenetic Study
title Differential Roles of the Two Raphe Nuclei in Amiable Social Behavior and Aggression – An Optogenetic Study
title_full Differential Roles of the Two Raphe Nuclei in Amiable Social Behavior and Aggression – An Optogenetic Study
title_fullStr Differential Roles of the Two Raphe Nuclei in Amiable Social Behavior and Aggression – An Optogenetic Study
title_full_unstemmed Differential Roles of the Two Raphe Nuclei in Amiable Social Behavior and Aggression – An Optogenetic Study
title_short Differential Roles of the Two Raphe Nuclei in Amiable Social Behavior and Aggression – An Optogenetic Study
title_sort differential roles of the two raphe nuclei in amiable social behavior and aggression – an optogenetic study
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6082963/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30116182
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2018.00163
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