
Blunted diurnal firing in lateral habenula projections to dorsal raphe nucleus and delayed photoentrainment in stress-susceptible mice
Author(s) -
He Liu,
Ashish Rastogi,
Priyam Narain,
Qing Xu,
Merima Šabanović,
Ayesha Darwish Alhammadi,
Lihua Guo,
Jun Cao,
Hongxing Zhang,
Hala Aqel,
Vongai Mlambo,
Rachid Rezgui,
Basma Radwan,
Dipesh Chaudhury
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
plos biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.127
H-Index - 271
eISSN - 1545-7885
pISSN - 1544-9173
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pbio.3000709
Subject(s) - dorsal raphe nucleus , optogenetics , circadian rhythm , raphe nuclei , biology , social defeat , neuroscience , medicine , raphe , habenula , endocrinology , serotonin , serotonergic , central nervous system , receptor
Daily rhythms are disrupted in patients with mood disorders. The lateral habenula (LHb) and dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) contribute to circadian timekeeping and regulate mood. Thus, pathophysiology in these nuclei may be responsible for aberrations in daily rhythms during mood disorders. Using the 15-day chronic social defeat stress (CSDS) paradigm and in vitro slice electrophysiology, we measured the effects of stress on diurnal rhythms in firing of LHb cells projecting to the DRN (cells LHb→DRN ) and unlabeled DRN cells. We also performed optogenetic experiments to investigate if increased firing in cells LHb→DRN during exposure to a weak 7-day social defeat stress (SDS) paradigm induces stress-susceptibility. Last, we investigated whether exposure to CSDS affected the ability of mice to photoentrain to a new light–dark (LD) cycle. The cells LHb→DRN and unlabeled DRN cells of stress-susceptible mice express greater blunted diurnal firing compared to stress-näive (control) and stress-resilient mice. Daytime optogenetic activation of cells LHb→DRN during SDS induces stress-susceptibility which shows the direct correlation between increased activity in this circuit and putative mood disorders. Finally, we found that stress-susceptible mice are slower, while stress-resilient mice are faster, at photoentraining to a new LD cycle. Our findings suggest that exposure to strong stressors induces blunted daily rhythms in firing in cells LHb→DRN , DRN cells and decreases the initial rate of photoentrainment in susceptible-mice. In contrast, resilient-mice may undergo homeostatic adaptations that maintain daily rhythms in firing in cells LHb→DRN and also show rapid photoentrainment to a new LD cycle.