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Functional Ontogeny of Hypothalamic Agrp Neurons in Neonatal Mouse Behaviors.

Citation
Zimmer, M. R., et al. “Functional Ontogeny Of Hypothalamic Agrp Neurons In Neonatal Mouse Behaviors.”. Cell, pp. 44-59.e7.
Center Yale University
Author Marcelo R Zimmer, Antonio H O Fonseca, Onur Iyilikci, Rafael Dai Pra, Marcelo O Dietrich
Keywords AgRP neurons, foster dam, maternal care, neonatal behaviors, nest isolation, suckling behavior, thermoneutrality, ultrasonic vocalizations
Abstract

Hypothalamic Agrp neurons regulate food ingestion in adult mice. Whether these neurons are functional before animals start to ingest food is unknown. Here, we studied the functional ontogeny of Agrp neurons during breastfeeding using postnatal day 10 mice. In contrast to adult mice, we show that isolation from the nursing nest, not milk deprivation or ingestion, activated Agrp neurons. Non-nutritive suckling and warm temperatures blunted this effect. Using in vivo fiber photometry, neonatal Agrp neurons showed a rapid increase in activity upon isolation from the nest, an effect rapidly diminished following reunion with littermates. Neonates unable to release GABA from Agrp neurons expressed blunted emission of isolation-induced ultrasonic vocalizations. Chemogenetic overactivation of these neurons further increased emission of these ultrasonic vocalizations, but not milk ingestion. We uncovered important functional properties of hypothalamic Agrp neurons during mouse development, suggesting these neurons facilitate offspring-to-caregiver bonding.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Cell
Volume
178
Issue
1
Number of Pages
44-59.e7
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1097-4172
DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2019.04.026
Alternate Journal
Cell
PMID
31104844
PMCID
PMC6688755
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