Processing of visually evoked innate fear by a non-canonical thalamic pathway

Pengfei Wei(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Nan Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhijian Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xuemei Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yongqiang Tang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiaobin He(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Bifeng Wu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zheng Zhou(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yaohan Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Juan Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yi Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xuanyi Zhou(Wuhan University), Lin Xu(Kunming Institute of Zoology), Lin Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Guo‐Qiang Bi(University of Science and Technology of China), Xintian Hu(Kunming Institute of Zoology), Fuqiang Xu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Liping Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Nature Communications
April 9, 2015
Cited by 413Open Access
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Abstract

The ability of animals to respond to life-threatening stimuli is essential for survival. Although vision provides one of the major sensory inputs for detecting threats across animal species, the circuitry underlying defensive responses to visual stimuli remains poorly defined. Here, we investigate the circuitry underlying innate defensive behaviours elicited by predator-like visual stimuli in mice. Our results demonstrate that neurons in the superior colliculus (SC) are essential for a variety of acute and persistent defensive responses to overhead looming stimuli. Optogenetic mapping revealed that SC projections to the lateral posterior nucleus (LP) of the thalamus, a non-canonical polymodal sensory relay, are sufficient to mimic visually evoked fear responses. In vivo electrophysiology experiments identified a di-synaptic circuit from SC through LP to the lateral amygdale (Amg), and lesions of the Amg blocked the full range of visually evoked defensive responses. Our results reveal a novel collicular-thalamic-Amg circuit important for innate defensive responses to visual threats.


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