The long term goal of this project is to elucidate the mechanisms that regulate functions of the noradrenergic locus coeruleus (LC) system. Our previous results defined afferents to the LC nucleus, and characterized LC dendrites that extend into specific extranuclear zones. However, these findings also generated new questions: (i) what are the inputs to extranuclear LC dendrites, (ii) what circuits are LC afferents a part of, and (iii) what LC output functions are regulated by these afferent circuits? The proposed experiments will answer these difficult but important questions using new anatomical technology and electrophysiology. LC neurons have extensive extranuclear dendrites, and the zones containing these distal dendrites receive numerous inputs that do not innervate the LC nuclear core. However, it has been difficult to identify which of these afferents terminate on LC dendrites vs. other elements in this region. We will retrogradely label afferents that specifically innervate extranuclear LC dendrites using the recently developed transsynaptic tract-tracer, pseudorabies virus (PRV). Dendritic afferents will be confirmed by ultrastructural analyses, and their impact on LC neuronal activity will be determined. In addition to direct afferents to LC neurons, it is important to determine inputs to these direct afferents, and thereby identify circuits that regulate LC function. We will map indirect afferents to the LC in a detailed time-course study of transsynaptic transport of PRV. For prominent indirect afferents, the relays to the LC will be identified and the influence of these afferent circuits on LC activity will be determined. Our preliminary results indicate that the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) is a prominent indirect input to the LC. The SCN is the brain's circadian pacemaker, and controls among other rhythms circadian properties of sleep and waking. As the LC has long been implicated in arousal, we hypothesize that the SCN-LC circuit is a key neural substrate linking circadian and sleep-waking processes. We will test this hypothesis by manipulating SCN activity, recording the effects on EEG arousal, and testing the role of the LC and associated relay nuclei in the effects obtained. This will be the first analysis of a neural link between circadian and arousal processes. These studies will extend our analysis of afferent control of LC function to identify inputs to distal LC dendrites and circuits that regulate LC activity. They will also provide the first demonstration of afferent circuit regulation of an important LC output function, cortical arousal.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01NS024698-14
Application #
6187515
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-IFCN-3 (01))
Program Officer
Kitt, Cheryl A
Project Start
1988-02-01
Project End
2003-04-30
Budget Start
2000-05-01
Budget End
2001-04-30
Support Year
14
Fiscal Year
2000
Total Cost
$330,690
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pennsylvania
Department
Psychiatry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
042250712
City
Philadelphia
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
19104
Gompf, Heinrich S; Greenberg, Joel H; Aston-Jones, Gary et al. (2010) 3-Monoiodothyronamine: the rationale for its action as an endogenous adrenergic-blocking neuromodulator. Brain Res 1351:130-40
Gompf, Heinrich; Chen, Jingqiu; Sun, Yi et al. (2009) Halothane-induced hypnosis is not accompanied by inactivation of orexinergic output in rodents. Anesthesiology 111:1001-9
Gompf, Heinrich S; Aston-Jones, Gary (2008) Role of orexin input in the diurnal rhythm of locus coeruleus impulse activity. Brain Res 1224:43-52
Gonzalez, M M C; Aston-Jones, G (2008) Light deprivation damages monoamine neurons and produces a depressive behavioral phenotype in rats. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 105:4898-903
Luo, Alice H; Georges, Francois E; Aston-Jones, Gary S (2008) Novel neurons in ventral tegmental area fire selectively during the active phase of the diurnal cycle. Eur J Neurosci 27:408-22
Gonzalez, Monica M C; Aston-Jones, Gary (2006) Circadian regulation of arousal: role of the noradrenergic locus coeruleus system and light exposure. Sleep 29:1327-36
Aston-Jones, Gary; Zhu, Yan; Card, J Patrick (2004) Numerous GABAergic afferents to locus ceruleus in the pericerulear dendritic zone: possible interneuronal pool. J Neurosci 24:2313-21
Aston-Jones, G; Chen, S; Zhu, Y et al. (2001) A neural circuit for circadian regulation of arousal. Nat Neurosci 4:732-8
Ivanov, A; Aston-Jones, G (2000) Hypocretin/orexin depolarizes and decreases potassium conductance in locus coeruleus neurons. Neuroreport 11:1755-8
El-Etri, M M; Ennis, M; Griff, E R et al. (1999) Evidence for cholinergic regulation of basal norepinephrine release in the rat olfactory bulb. Neuroscience 93:611-7

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