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Habenula molecular and functional Organization in models of Pathological Emotional States

Project description

Emotional dysregulation: neuronal study of the habenula and its hypothalamic inputs

Difficulty controlling emotions and resulting actions is a symptom of many mental health conditions, including anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. Understanding the neural mechanisms at play is essential to developing effective treatments. The lateral habenula is a key brain region involved in regulating negative emotions and in mood disorders. Excitatory inputs to the lateral habenula from the lateral hypothalamus are linked to negative emotions and potentially depression. With the support of the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions programme, the HOPES project will investigate the molecular and functional properties of lateral habenula neurons in relation to their inputs from the lateral hypothalamus to evaluate the role of this pathway in health and disease.

Objective

Emotions guide humans and animals in the selection of behavioral strategies to optimize outcomes and promote well-being. Repeated or unexpected strong negative stimuli such as stressors impair the processing of emotions and lead to the development of mood disorders such as depression and anxiety. Understanding how individuals control their emotions and cope with stressful events has become a major clinical challenge for the development of new treatments. This project aims to define the circuit mechanisms that control emotional regulation. I will focus on a brain region key in emotional regulation, namely the lateral habenula (LHb). Over the past decades, clinical and preclinical studies have identified the LHb as a major hub in the regulation of negative emotions and in the induction of mood disorders. Recent studies have highlighted that lateral hypothalamic (LHA) excitatory inputs to the LHb drive negative emotions (i.e. aversion) and may play a role in depression. However, how the LHb integrates diverse types of inputs to promote negative emotions remains unknown. The main hypothesis of the project is that the complex regulation of emotions is defined by a discrete organization of inputs to LHb that underlies maladaptive circuit-specific dysfunction in models of stress. I will investigate here the molecular and functional properties of the LHb neurons based on their discrete inputs from the LHA. I will use a multidisciplinary approach combining cutting-edge spatial transcriptomics, neuronal tracing and optogenetics to define for the first time the role of the molecularly-defined discrete LHA-LHb pathways in normal and disease-related behaviours. This project will provide key insights about the regulation of mood by the lateral habenula and how the inputs from the lateral hypothalamus are key in the pathophysiology of depression and anxiety disorders.

Fields of science

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Coordinator

KAROLINSKA INSTITUTET
Net EU contribution
€ 206 887,68
Address
Nobels Vag 5
17177 Stockholm
Sweden

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Region
Östra Sverige Stockholm Stockholms län
Activity type
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Links
Total cost
No data