Title | The tectonigral pathway regulates appetitive locomotion in predatory hunting in mice |
Authors | Huang, Meizhu Li, Dapeng Cheng, Xinyu Pei, Qing Xie, Zhiyong Gu, Huating Zhang, Xuerong Chen, Zijun Liu, Aixue Wang, Yi Sun, Fangmiao Li, Yulong Zhang, Jiayi He, Miao Xie, Yuan Zhang, Fan Qi, Xiangbing Shang, Congping Cao, Peng |
Affiliation | Guangzhou Regenerat Med & Hlth Guangdong Lab, Bioland Lab, Guangzhou, Peoples R China Capital Med Univ, Adv Innovat Ctr Human Brain Protect, Dept Neurobiol, Sch Basic Med Sci,Beijing Key Lab Neural Regenera, Beijing, Peoples R China Chinese Acad Med Sci, Peking Union Med Coll, Grad Sch, Beijing, Peoples R China Nat Inst Biol Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Biophys, State Key Lab Brain & Cognit Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China Peking Univ, Coll Life Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China Fudan Univ, State Key Lab Med Neurobiol, Shanghai, Peoples R China Hebei Med Univ, Dept Pharmacol, Key Lab Neural & Vasc Biol, Minist Educ, Shijiazhuang, Hebei, Peoples R China Tsinghua Univ, Tsinghua Inst Multidisciplinary Biomed Res, Beijing, Peoples R China |
Keywords | GABAERGIC NEURONS SUPERIOR COLLICULUS PREY CAPTURE DOPAMINERGIC-NEURONS SENSORY SIGNALS MIDBRAIN CIRCUITS BEHAVIOR INFORMATION PROJECTION |
Issue Date | 20-Jul-2021 |
Publisher | NATURE COMMUNICATIONS |
Abstract | Appetitive locomotion is essential for animals to approach rewards, such as food and prey. The neuronal circuitry controlling appetitive locomotion is unclear. In a goal-directed behavior-predatory hunting, we show an excitatory brain circuit from the superior colliculus (SC) to the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) to enhance appetitive locomotion in mice. This tectonigral pathway transmits locomotion-speed signals to dopamine neurons and triggers dopamine release in the dorsal striatum. Synaptic inactivation of this pathway impairs appetitive locomotion but not defensive locomotion. Conversely, activation of this pathway increases the speed and frequency of approach during predatory hunting, an effect that depends on the activities of SNc dopamine neurons. Together, these data reveal that the SC regulates locomotion-speed signals to SNc dopamine neurons to enhance appetitive locomotion in mice. Goal-oriented movement is a fundamental animal behaviour. Here, the authors show that neurons in the superior colliculus project to the substantia nigra pars compacta, regulating dopaminergic signaling and specifically appetitive locomotion in mice. |
URI | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/619339 |
ISSN | 2041-1723 |
DOI | 10.1038/s41467-021-24696-3 |
Indexed | SCI(E) |
Appears in Collections: | 生命科学学院 |