Mar 18, 2022
Claustrum mediates bidirectional and reversible control of stress-induced anxiety responses.
Science advances
- Volume
- 8
- Number
- 11
- First page
- eabi6375
- Last page
- Language
- English
- Publishing type
- Research paper (scientific journal)
- DOI
- 10.1126/sciadv.abi6375
The processing of stress responses involves brain-wide communication among cortical and subcortical regions; however, the underlying mechanisms remain elusive. Here, we show that the claustrum (CLA) is crucial for the control of stress-induced anxiety-related behaviors. A combined approach using brain activation mapping and machine learning showed that the CLA activation serves as a reliable marker of exposure to acute stressors. In TRAP2 mice, which allow activity-dependent genetic labeling, chemogenetic activation of the CLA neuronal ensemble tagged by acute social defeat stress (DS) elicited anxiety-related behaviors, whereas silencing of the CLA ensemble attenuated DS-induced anxiety-related behaviors. Moreover, the CLA received strong input from DS-activated basolateral amygdala neurons, and its circuit-selective optogenetic photostimulation temporarily elicited anxiety-related behaviors. Last, silencing of the CLA ensemble during stress exposure increased resistance to chronic DS. The CLA thus bidirectionally controls stress-induced emotional responses, and its inactivation can serve as a preventative strategy to increase stress resilience.
- Link information
- ID information
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- DOI : 10.1126/sciadv.abi6375
- Pubmed ID : 35302853
- Pubmed Central ID : PMC8932664