Department of Cell and Systems Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 3G5, Canada.
Department of Physiology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1A8, Canada; Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1A8, Canada; Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1A8, Canada.
Curr Biol. 2023 Apr 24;33(8):1550-1564.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.03.077. Epub 2023 Apr 11.
Waking behaviors such as sitting or standing require suitable levels of muscle tone. But it is unclear how arousal and motor circuits communicate with one another so that appropriate motor tone occurs during wakefulness. Cataplexy is a peculiar condition in which muscle tone is involuntarily lost during normal periods of wakefulness. Cataplexy therefore provides a unique opportunity for identifying the signaling mechanisms that synchronize motor and arousal behaviors. Cataplexy occurs when hypothalamic orexin neurons are lost in narcolepsy; however, it is unclear if motor-arousal decoupling in cataplexy is directly or indirectly caused by orexin cell loss. Here, we used genomic, proteomic, chemogenetic, electrophysiological, and behavioral assays to determine if grafting orexin cells into the brain of cataplectic (i.e., orexin) mice restores normal motor-arousal behaviors by preventing cataplexy. First, we engineered immortalized orexin cells and found that they not only produce and release orexin but also exhibit a gene profile that mimics native orexin neurons. Second, we show that engineered orexin cells thrive and integrate into host tissue when transplanted into the brain of mice. Next, we found that grafting only 200-300 orexin cells into the dorsal raphe nucleus-a region densely innervated by native orexin neurons-reduces cataplexy. Last, we show that real-time chemogenetic activation of orexin cells restores motor-arousal synchrony by preventing cataplexy. We suggest that orexin signaling is critical for arousal-motor synchrony during wakefulness and that the dorsal raphe plays a pivotal role in coupling arousal and motor behaviors.
觉醒行为,如坐立或站立,需要有适当的肌肉张力水平。但目前尚不清楚觉醒和运动回路如何相互沟通,以便在觉醒期间出现适当的运动张力。猝倒症是一种特殊的病症,在正常的觉醒期间,肌肉张力会不由自主地丧失。因此,猝倒症为确定同步运动和觉醒行为的信号机制提供了一个独特的机会。在发作性睡病中,下丘脑食欲素神经元丧失会导致猝倒症;然而,尚不清楚猝倒症中运动-觉醒解偶联是否是由食欲素细胞丧失直接或间接引起的。在这里,我们使用基因组学、蛋白质组学、化学遗传学、电生理学和行为学检测,来确定向猝倒症(即食欲素)小鼠的大脑中移植食欲素细胞是否可以通过防止猝倒症来恢复正常的运动-觉醒行为。首先,我们设计了永生的食欲素细胞,并发现它们不仅产生和释放食欲素,而且还表现出类似于天然食欲素神经元的基因表达谱。其次,我们表明,当移植到小鼠大脑中时,设计的食欲素细胞可以茁壮成长并与宿主组织整合。接下来,我们发现,将仅 200-300 个食欲素细胞移植到中缝背核(一个被天然食欲素神经元密集支配的区域),就可以减少猝倒症的发生。最后,我们表明,实时化学遗传学激活食欲素细胞可以通过防止猝倒症来恢复运动-觉醒同步。我们认为,食欲素信号对于觉醒期间的觉醒-运动同步至关重要,并且中缝背核在耦合觉醒和运动行为方面起着关键作用。