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Dopaminoceptive D1 and D2 neurons in ventral hippocampus arbitrate approach and avoidance in anxiety

Authors
Arthur Godino,Marine Salery
Angelica M. Minier-Toribio,Vishwendra Patel,John F. Fullard,Eric M. Parise,Freddyson J. Martinez-Rivera,Carole Morel,Panos Roussos,Robert D. Blitzer,Eric J. Nestler,Angélica Minier-Toribio,John Fullard,Eric Parise,Freddyson Martínez-Rivera,Robert Blitzer
+14 authors
,Eric Nestler
Published
Jul 28, 2023
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Abstract

The hippocampus 1-7, as well as dopamine circuits 8-11, coordinate decision-making in anxiety-eliciting situations. Yet, little is known about how dopamine modulates hippocampal representations of emotionally-salient stimuli to inform appropriate resolution of approach versus avoidance conflicts. We here study dopaminoceptive neurons in mouse ventral hippocampus (vHipp), molecularly distinguished by their expression of dopamine D1 or D2 receptors. We show that these neurons are transcriptionally distinct and topographically organized across vHipp subfields and cell types. In the ventral subiculum where they are enriched, both D1 and D2 neurons are recruited during anxiogenic exploration, yet with distinct profiles related to investigation and behavioral selection. In turn, they mediate opposite approach/avoidance responses, and are differentially modulated by dopaminergic transmission in that region. Together, these results suggest that vHipp dopamine dynamics gate exploratory behaviors under contextual uncertainty, implicating dopaminoception in the complex computation engaged in vHipp to govern emotional states.

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