| Literature DB >> 30873055 |
Hyun Woo Lee1, Soo Hyun Yang1, Jin Yong Kim1, Hyun Kim1.
Abstract
The habenula is a complex nucleus composed of lateral and medial subnuclei, which connect between the limbic forebrain and midbrain. Over the past few years, the lateral habenula has received considerable attention because of its potential roles in cognition and in the pathogenesis of various psychiatric disorders. Unlike extensively studied lateral habenula, anatomically and histologically distinct medial habenula remains largely understudied. The medial habenula can be further subdivided into a dorsal region containing excitatory neurons that express the tachykinin neuropeptide substance P and a ventral region containing dense cholinergic neurons. Although the medial habenula is the source of one of the major cholinergic pathways in the brain, relatively few studies have been conducted to understand its roles. Recently, however, the medial habenula cholinergic system has attracted more attention because of its potential to provide therapeutic targets for the treatment of nicotine withdrawal symptoms, drug addiction, and various mood disorders. Here, we discuss the role of the medial habenula cholinergic system in brain function.Entities:
Keywords: cholinergic system; depression; drug addiction; fear; habenula; nicotine addiction and withdrawal
Year: 2019 PMID: 30873055 PMCID: PMC6404551 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00100
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Psychological symptoms related to habenular cholinergic signaling.
| Nicotine withdrawal symptoms | •Nicotine cessation after chronic exposure | •Activation of IPN GABAergic neurons | ( |
| •Optogenetic stimulation of IPN GABAergic neurons | •Physical withdrawal symptoms | ( | |
| •Re-exposure to nicotine after chronic administration | •Increased spontaneous firing of habenula cholinergic neurons | ( | |
| Drug addiction | •Chronic morphine administration | •Reduced c-fos immunoreactivity | ( |
| •Chronic exposure to D-amphetamine, methamphetamine, MDMA, and cocaine | •Axonal neurodegeneration of MHb neurons | ( | |
| •Ibogaine treatment in rodents (therapeutic effect on drug addiction) | •Reduced self-administration of cocaine, alcohol, and morphine | ( | |
| Fear | •Ablation of bed nucleus of the anterior commissure (BAC) | •Increased fear response | ( |
| •Ablation of habenula cholinergic neurons and genetic inactivation of GABAB receptors | •Enhanced expression of fear | ( | |
| •Conditional deletion of cannabinoid receptor 1 from MHb neurons | •Reduced fear-conditioned freezing | ( | |
| Depression | •Knockdown of habenula ChAT gene expression | •Anhedonia-like behavior | ( |
| •Habenula cholinergic gene expression in rat model of depression and humans with major depressive disorder | •Decreased expression of cholinergic signaling genes in the habenula | ( | |
| •Electrical lesion of MHb in the CUMS-exposed rats | •The lower hedonic state induced by CUMS was restored | ( |
Figure 1Schematic summary of nAChR subunit expression and the MHb-IPN pathway. (A) nAChR subunits are differentially expressed in the MHbV neurons, which project to central regions (IPDM, IPR, IPC, and IPI) excluding lateral regions (IPL and IPDL) of the IPN through the fasciculus retroflexus (fr). MHbV is composed of three subregions, such as inferior (MHbVI), central (MHbVC), and lateral (MHbVL). α6 nAChR subunit (CHRNA6) is exclusively found in the MHbVI. In contrast to CHRNA6, α4 nAChR subunit (CHRNA4) is mainly expressed in the MHbVL. IPN is composed of various subregions: rostral (IPR), dorsomedial (IPDM), dorsolateral (IPDL), caudal (IPC), and intermediate (IPI). (B) MHbVI, MHbVC, and MHbVL preferentially project to ventral, central, and dorsal regions of the IPN, respectively.