Abstract

The fasciculus retroflexus is an important fascicle that mediates reward-related behaviors and is associated with different psychiatric diseases. It is the main habenular efference and constitutes a link between forebrain regions, the midbrain, and the rostral hindbrain. The proper functional organization of habenular circuitry requires complex molecular programs to control the wiring of the habenula during development. However, the mechanisms guiding the habenular axons toward their targets remain mostly unknown. Here, we demonstrate the role of the mesodiencephalic dopaminergic neurons (substantia nigra pars compacta and ventral tegmental area) as an intermediate target for the correct medial habenular axons navigation along the anteroposterior axis. These neuronal populations are distributed along the anteroposterior trajectory of these axons in the mesodiencephalic basal plate. Using in vitro and in vivo experiments, we determined that this navigation is the result of netrin 1 attraction generated by the mesodiencephalic dopaminergic neurons. This attraction is mediated by the receptor deleted in colorectal cancer (DCC), which is strongly expressed in the medial habenular axons. The increment in our knowledge on the fasciculus retroflexus trajectory guidance mechanisms opens the possibility of analyzing if its alteration in mental health patients could account for some of their symptoms.

Highlights

  • The habenulae (Hb), located in the dorsal part of prosomere 2 (p2), is constituted by two main nuclei, the medial and the lateral habenulae

  • A group of fibers defasciculated from the main tract and navigated into the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc); these should correspond to lHb axons

  • Considering the neuronal populations that surround the tract, we identified the SNc and ventral tegmental area (VTA) as potential candidates

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Summary

Introduction

The habenulae (Hb), located in the dorsal part of prosomere 2 (p2), is constituted by two main nuclei, the medial and the lateral habenulae (mHb and lHb, respectively; Andres et al, 1999). The main efferents of lHb are the VTA (Araki et al, 1988; Brinschwitz et al, 2010), the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc), the raphe complex (Wang and Aghajanian, 1977), and the locus coeruleus (Herkenham and Nauta, 1979). These lHb axons form the shield portion of the bundle around the mHb fibers (Bianco and Wilson, 2009; Schmidt et al, 2014; Ichijo and Toyama, 2015)

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