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A distinct parabrachial-to-lateral hypothalamus circuit for motivational suppression of feeding by nociception.


ABSTRACT: The motivation to eat is not only shaped by nutrition but also competed by external stimuli including pain. How the mouse hypothalamus, the feeding regulation center, integrates nociceptive inputs to modulate feeding is unclear. Within the key nociception relay center parabrachial nucleus (PBN), we demonstrated that neurons projecting to the lateral hypothalamus (LHPBN) are nociceptive yet distinct from danger-encoding central amygdala-projecting (CeAPBN) neurons. Activation of LHPBN strongly suppressed feeding by limiting eating frequency and also reduced motivation to work for food reward. Refined approach-avoidance paradigm revealed that suppression of LHPBN, but not CeAPBN, sustained motivation to obtain food. The effect of LHPBN neurons on feeding was reversed by suppressing downstream LHVGluT2 neurons. Thus, distinct from a circuit for fear and escape responses, LHPBN neurons channel nociceptive signals to LHVGluT2 neurons to suppress motivational drive for feeding. Our study provides a new perspective in understanding feeding regulation by external competing stimuli.

SUBMITTER: Phua SC 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8104871 | biostudies-literature | 2021 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A distinct parabrachial-to-lateral hypothalamus circuit for motivational suppression of feeding by nociception.

Phua Siew Cheng SC   Tan Yu Lin YL   Kok Alison Maun Yeng AMY   Senol Esra E   Chiam Christine Jin Hui CJH   Lee Chun-Yao CY   Peng Yanmin Y   Lim Auriel Theodora Jacobea ATJ   Mohammad Hasan H   Lim Jing-Xuan JX   Fu Yu Y  

Science advances 20210507 19


The motivation to eat is not only shaped by nutrition but also competed by external stimuli including pain. How the mouse hypothalamus, the feeding regulation center, integrates nociceptive inputs to modulate feeding is unclear. Within the key nociception relay center parabrachial nucleus (PBN), we demonstrated that neurons projecting to the lateral hypothalamus (<sup>LH</sup>PBN) are nociceptive yet distinct from danger-encoding central amygdala-projecting (<sup>CeA</sup>PBN) neurons. Activatio  ...[more]

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