Nucleus incertus promotes cortical desynchronization and behavioral arousal.

2017 
Arousal and vigilance are essential for survival and relevant regulatory neural circuits lie within the brainstem, hypothalamus and forebrain. The nucleus incertus (NI) is a distinct site within the pontine periventricular gray, containing a substantial population of GABAergic neurons with long-range, ascending projections. Existing neuroanatomical data and functional studies in anesthetized rats, suggest the NI is a central component of a midline behavioral control network well positioned to modulate arousal, vigilance and exploratory navigation, yet none of these roles have been established experimentally. We used a chemogenetic approach—clozapine-N-oxide (CNO) activation of virally delivered excitatory hM3Dq-DREADDs—to activate the NI in rats and examined the behavioral and physiological effects, relative to effects in naive rats and appropriate viral-treated controls. hM3Dq activation by CNO resulted in long-lasting depolarization of NI neurons with action potentials, in vitro. Peripheral injection of CNO significantly increased c-Fos immunoreactivity in the NI and promoted cortical electroencephalograph (EEG) desynchronization. These brain changes were associated with heightened arousal, and increased locomotor activity in the homecage and in a novel environment. Furthermore, NI activation altered responses in a fear conditioning paradigm, reflected by increased head-scanning, vigilant behaviors during conditioned fear recall. These findings provide direct evidence that the NI promotes general arousal via a broad behavioral activation circuit and support early hypotheses, based on its connectivity, that the NI is a modulator of cognition and attention, and emotional and motivated behaviors.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    75
    References
    32
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []