Anticipation of danger at first elicits panic in animals, but later it helps them to avoid the real threat adaptively. In zebrafish, as fish experience more and more danger, neurons in the ventral habenula (vHb) showed tonic increase in the activity to the presented cue and activated serotonergic neurons in the median raphe (MR). This neuronal activity could represent the expectation of a dangerous outcome and be used for comparison with a real outcome when the fish is learning how to escape from a dangerous to a safer environment. Indeed, inhibiting synaptic transmission from vHb to MR impaired adaptive avoidance learning, while panic behavior induced by classical fear conditioning remained intact. Furthermore, artificially triggering this negative outcome expectation signal by optogenetic stimulation of vHb neurons evoked place avoidance behavior. Thus, vHb-MR circuit is essential for representing the level of expected danger and behavioral programming to adaptively avoid potential hazard.
When animals encounter conflict they initiate and escalate aggression to establish and maintain a social hierarchy. The neural mechanisms by which animals resolve fighting behaviors to determine such social hierarchies remain unknown. We identified two subregions of the dorsal habenula (dHb) in zebrafish that antagonistically regulate the outcome of conflict. The losing experience reduced neural transmission in the lateral subregion of dHb (dHbL)-dorsal/intermediate interpeduncular nucleus (d/iIPN) circuit. Silencing of the dHbL or medial subregion of dHb (dHbM) caused a stronger predisposition to lose or win a fight, respectively. These results demonstrate that the dHbL and dHbM comprise a dual control system for conflict resolution of social aggression.
The encoding of long-term associative memories for learned behaviors is a fundamental brain function. Yet, how behavior is stably consolidated and retrieved in the vertebrate cortex is poorly understood. We trained zebrafish in aversive reinforcement learning and measured calcium signals across their entire brain during retrieval of the learned response. A discrete area of dorsal telencephalon that was inactive immediately after training became active the next day. Analysis of the identified area indicated that it was specific and essential for long-term memory retrieval and contained electrophysiological responses entrained to the learning stimulus. When the behavioral rule changed, a rapid spatial shift in the functional map across the telencephalon was observed. These results demonstrate that the retrieval of long-term memories for learned behaviors can be studied at the whole-brain scale in behaving zebrafish in vivo. Moreover, the findings indicate that consolidated memory traces can be rapidly modified during reinforcement learning.
During development, correlated neuronal activity plays an important role in the establishment of the central nervous system (CNS). We have previously reported that a widely propagating correlated neuronal activity, termed the depolarization wave, is evoked by various sensory inputs. A remarkable feature of the depolarization wave is that it spreads broadly through the brain and spinal cord. In the present study, we examined whether the depolarization wave occurs spontaneously in the embryonic rat CNS and, if so, where it originates. In E15-16 rat embryos, spontaneous optically-revealed signals appeared in association with the rhythmic discharges of cranial motoneurons and propagated widely with similar characteristics to the evoked depolarization wave. At E15, the spontaneous wave mostly originated in the cervical to upper lumbar cords. At E16, the wave was predominantly generated in the lumbosacral cord although a wave associated with the second oscillatory burst was initiated in the rostral cord. At E16, a few waves also originated in the rostral ventrolateral medulla and the dorsomedial pons. When the influence of the caudal cord was removed by transecting the spinal cord, the contribution of the medulla and pons became more significant. These results show that the depolarization wave can be triggered by the spontaneous activity of multiple neuronal populations which are distributed widely from the pons to the lumbosacral cord, although the spinal cord usually plays a predominant role. This network possibly works as a self-distributing system that maintains the incidence and complicated patterns of the correlated activity in the developing CNS.
The efferent connections and axonal and dendritic morphologies of periventricular neurons were examined in the optic tectum of rainbow trout to classify periventricular efferent neurons in salmonids. Among the target nuclei of tectal efferents, tracer injections to the following four structures labeled periventricular neurons: the area pretectalis pars dorsalis (APd), nucleus pretectalis superficialis pars magnocellularis (PSm), nucleus ventrolateralis of torus semicircularis (TS), and nucleus isthmi (NI). Two types of periventricular neurons were labeled by injections to the APd. One of them had an apical dendrite ramifying at the stratum fibrosum et griseum superficiale (SFGS), with an axon that bifurcated into two branches at the stratum griseum centrale (SGC), and the other had an apical dendrite ramifying at the SGC. Two types of periventricular neurons were labeled after injections to the TS. One of them had an apical dendrite ramifying at the boundary between the stratum opticum (SO) and the SFGS, and the other had dendritic branches restricted to the stratum album centrale or stratum periventriculare. Injections to the PSm and NI labeled periventricular neurons of the same type with an apical dendrite ramifying at the SO and a characteristic axon that split into superficial and deep branches projecting to the PSm and NI, respectively. This cell type also possessed axonal branches that terminated within the tectum. These results indicate that periventricular efferent neurons can be classified into at least five types that possess type-specific axonal and dendritic morphologies. We also describe other tectal neurons labeled by the present injections.
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