Relaxin family peptide receptor 3 (RXFP3) expressing cells in the zona incerta/lateral hypothalamus augment behavioural arousal

Brandon K. Richards, Sarah S. Ch'ng, Ariel B. Simon, Terence Y. Pang, Jee Hyun Kim, Andrew J. Lawrence, Christina J. Perry*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Fear-related psychopathologies, such as post-traumatic stress disorder, are linked to dysfunction in neural circuits that govern fear memory and arousal. The lateral hypothalamus (LH) and zona incerta (ZI) regulate fear, but our understanding of the precise neural circuits and cell types involved remains limited. Here, we examined the role of relaxin family peptide receptor 3 (RXFP3) expressing cells in the LH/ZI in conditioned fear expression and general arousal in male RXFP3-Cre mice. We found that LH/ZI RXFP3+ (LH/ZI RXFP3) cells projected strongly to fear learning, stress, and arousal centres, notably, the periaqueductal grey, lateral habenula, and nucleus reuniens. These cells do not express hypocretin/orexin or melanin-concentrating hormone but display putative efferent connectivity with LH hypocretin/orexin+ neurons and dopaminergic A13 cells. Following Pavlovian fear conditioning, chemogenetically activating LH/ZI RXFP3 cells reduced fear expression (freezing) overall but also induced jumping behaviour and increased locomotor activity. Therefore, the decreased freezing was more likely to reflect enhanced arousal rather than reduced fear. Indeed, stimulating these cells produced distinct patterns of coactivation between several motor, stress, and arousal regions, as measured by Fos expression. These results suggest that activating LH/ZI RXFP3 cells generates brain-wide activation patterns that augment behavioural arousal.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Neurochemistry
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 4 Sept 2024

Keywords

  • arousal
  • defensive response
  • fear conditioning
  • hypothalamus
  • RXFP3
  • zona incerta

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