Thirst-associated preoptic neurons encode an aversive motivational drive

William E. Allen(Stanford University), Laura A. DeNardo(Stanford University), Michael Z. Chen(Stanford University), Cindy D. Liu(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Kyle M. Loh(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Lief E. Fenno(Stanford University), Charu Ramakrishnan(Stanford University), Karl Deisseroth(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Liqun Luo(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Science
September 14, 2017
Cited by 402

Abstract

Water deprivation produces a drive to seek and consume water. How neural activity creates this motivation remains poorly understood. We used activity-dependent genetic labeling to characterize neurons activated by water deprivation in the hypothalamic median preoptic nucleus (MnPO). Single-cell transcriptional profiling revealed that dehydration-activated MnPO neurons consist of a single excitatory cell type. After optogenetic activation of these neurons, mice drank water and performed an operant lever-pressing task for water reward with rates that scaled with stimulation frequency. This stimulation was aversive, and instrumentally pausing stimulation could reinforce lever-pressing. Activity of these neurons gradually decreased over the course of an operant session. Thus, the activity of dehydration-activated MnPO neurons establishes a scalable, persistent, and aversive internal state that dynamically controls thirst-motivated behavior.


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