Abstract

The neural circuits involved in mediating complex behaviors are being rapidly elucidated using various newly developed and powerful anatomical and molecular techniques, providing insights into the neural basis for anxiety disorders, depression, addiction, and dysfunctional social behaviors. Many of these behaviors and associated physiological processes involve the activation of the amygdala in conjunction with cortical and hippocampal circuits. Ascending subcortical projections provide modulatory inputs to the extended amygdala and its related nodes (or “hubs”) within these key circuits. One such input arises from the nucleus incertus (NI) in the tegmentum, which sends amino acid- and peptide-containing projections throughout the forebrain. Notably, a distinct population of GABAergic NI neurons expresses the highly-conserved neuropeptide, relaxin-3, and relaxin-3 signaling has been implicated in the modulation of reward/motivation and anxiety- and depressive-like behaviors in rodents via actions within the extended amygdala. Thus, a detailed description of the relaxin-3 innervation of the extended amygdala would provide an anatomical framework for an improved understanding of NI and relaxin-3 modulation of these and other specific amygdala-related functions. Therefore, in this study, we examined the distribution of NI projections and relaxin-3-positive elements (axons/fibers/terminals) within the amygdala, relative to the distribution of neurons expressing the calcium-binding proteins, parvalbumin (PV), calretinin (CR) and/or calbindin. Anterograde tracer injections into the NI revealed a topographic distribution of NI efferents within the amygdala that was near identical to the distribution of relaxin-3-immunoreactive fibers. Highest densities of anterogradely-labeled elements and relaxin-3-immunoreactive fibers were observed in the medial nucleus of the amygdala, medial divisions of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BST) and in the endopiriform nucleus. In contrast, sparse anterogradely-labeled and relaxin-3-immunoreactive fibers were observed in other amygdala nuclei, including the lateral, central and basal nuclei, while the nucleus accumbens lacked any innervation. Using synaptophysin as a synaptic marker, we identified relaxin-3 positive synaptic terminals in the medial amygdala, BST and endopiriform nucleus of amygdala. Our findings demonstrate the existence of topographic NI and relaxin-3-containing projections to specific nuclei of the extended amygdala, consistent with a likely role for this putative integrative arousal system in the regulation of amygdala-dependent social and emotional behaviors.

Highlights

  • The amygdala is considered a central node for processing adaptive social and emotional behavior (Aggleton, 1993; Phelps, 2006; Adolphs, 2008)

  • The delineation of the different amygdala nuclei has been recently documented (Olucha-Bordonau et al, 2014; Paxinos and Watson, 2014) and based on these topographical descriptions, in this study we have considered three regions: the temporal amygdala (TA), the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (ST1) which corresponded to the dorsal extension, and the sublenticular extended amygdala (SLEA), which corresponded to the ventral extension

  • The lateral, basal and cortical nuclei are of pallial origin (Table 1), while the two extensions, together with the medial and central nuclei, constitute the medial and central extended amygdala, 1The bed nucleus of the stria terminalis has been classically abbreviated as BST or BNST, the different sub-subdivisions of this complex make this unsuitable, following the 7th Edition of the Paxinos and Watson Atlas of the Rat Brain, we have adopted the simplified abbreviation of Stria Terminalis (ST) to refer to these nuclei

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Summary

Introduction

The amygdala is considered a central node for processing adaptive social and emotional behavior (Aggleton, 1993; Phelps, 2006; Adolphs, 2008). Other telencephalic inputs to the amygdala that originate in prefrontal cortex (McDonald, 1998; Vertes, 2004) and hippocampus (Canteras and Swanson, 1992) shape emotional processing by adding information to past emotional experiences or the context in which emotional experiences takes place (Sierra-Mercado et al, 2011). Intrinsic connections between amygdala subnuclei convey information to amygdala outputs (Pitkänen et al, 1997; Jolkkonen and Pitkänen, 1998; Schmitt et al, 2012). These connections are filtered/modulated by intrinsic GABAergic circuits (Sun and Cassell, 1993) and most GABAergic neurons in the amygdala contain the calcium-binding proteins, parvalbumin (PV), calbindin (CB28kD) or calretinin (CR; McDonald and Mascagni, 2001)

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