PaperPlayer biorxiv neuroscience

Dorsal Periaqueductal gray ensembles represent approach and avoidance states


Listen Later

Link to bioRxiv paper:
http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.11.19.389486v1?rss=1
Authors: Reis, F. M., Lee, J. Y., Maesta-Pereira, S., Schuette, P. J., Chakerian, M., Liu, J., La-Vu, M. Q., Tobias, B. C., Canteras, N., Kao, J. C., Adhikari, A.
Abstract:
Animals must balance needs to approach threats for risk-assessment and to avoid danger. The dorsal periaqueductal gray (dPAG) controls defensive behaviors, but it is unknown how it represents states associated with threat approach and avoidance. We identified a dPAG threat-avoidance ensemble in mice that showed higher activity far from threats such as the open arms of the elevated plus maze and a live predator. These cells were also more active during threat-avoidance behaviors such as escape and freezing, even though these behaviors have antagonistic motor output. Conversely, the threat-approach ensemble was more active during risk-assessment behaviors and near threats. Furthermore, unsupervised methods showed approach/avoidance states were encoded with shared activity patterns across threats. Lastly, the relative number of cells in each ensemble predicted threat-avoidance across mice. Thus, dPAG ensembles dynamically encode threat approach and avoidance states, providing a flexible mechanism to balance risk-assessment and danger avoidance.
Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

PaperPlayer biorxiv neuroscienceBy Multimodal LLC