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Insular cortex neurons encode and retrieve specific immune responses
Author(s) -
Tamar Koren,
Re’ee Yifa,
M. Amer,
Maria Krot,
Nadia Boshnak,
Tamar L. Ben-Shaanan,
Hilla AzulayDebby,
Itay Zalayat,
Eden Avishai,
Haitham Hajjo,
Maya Schiller,
Hedva Haykin,
Ben Korin,
Dorit Farfara,
Fahed Hakim,
Oren Kobiler,
Kobi Rosenblum,
Asya Rolls
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2021.10.013
Subject(s) - biology , encode , immune system , neuroscience , cortex (anatomy) , computational biology , genetics , gene
Increasing evidence indicates that the brain regulates peripheral immunity, yet whether and how the brain represents the state of the immune system remains unclear. Here, we show that the brain's insular cortex (InsCtx) stores immune-related information. Using activity-dependent cell labeling in mice (Fos TRAP ), we captured neuronal ensembles in the InsCtx that were active under two different inflammatory conditions (dextran sulfate sodium [DSS]-induced colitis and zymosan-induced peritonitis). Chemogenetic reactivation of these neuronal ensembles was sufficient to broadly retrieve the inflammatory state under which these neurons were captured. Thus, we show that the brain can store and retrieve specific immune responses, extending the classical concept of immunological memory to neuronal representations of inflammatory information.

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