Medial and dorsal lateral septum involving social disruption stress-primed escalation in acid-induced writhes

Yi-Han Liao, Li Han Sun, Yi Chi Su, Wei Jen Yao, Lung Yu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Introduction: Stress may cause prospective escalations in abdominal pain magnitude and accumbal TRPV1 expression, while central neural circuits mediating these stress effects remain unclear. Methods: Using retrograde tracing methods, we first demonstrated the existence of a medial septal-dorsal lateral septal -accumbal circuit very likely involving social disruption stress-primed escalations in acid-induced writhes and accumbal TRPV1 level. An intersectional viral strategy and virus-carrying hM3Dq and hM4Di DREADDs were, then, employed to selectively modulate GABAergic and cholinergic neuronal activity in medial and dorsal lateral septum. Results: Exciting medial septal GABAergic neuron was found to prevent social disruption stress-primed escalations in acid-induced writhes and accumbal TRPV1 and PKCε expressions. Likewise, inactivating dorsal lateral septal cholinergic neurons was also effective in abolishing these stress-primed escalations. Inactivating GABAergic neuron in non-stressed animals’ medial septum was found to reproduce the stress-primed effects in causing heightened acid-induced writhes and accumbal TRPV1 and PKCε levels. Discussion: These results, taken together, prompt us to conclude that social disruption stress may produce plastic changes in a newly-identified medial septal-dorsal lateral septal-accumbal circuit. Moreover, medial septal GABAergic hypoactivity and dorsal lateral septal cholinergic hyperactivity are, at least, two likely causes reflecting such stress-produced escalations in abdominal pain magnitude and pain transduction-related protein over-expression in nucleus accumbens.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1158525
JournalFrontiers in Molecular Neuroscience
Volume16
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Molecular Biology
  • Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience

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