Wakefulness Is Governed by GABA and Histamine Cotransmission


Date

2015-07-01

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Data

Abstract

Histaminergic neurons in the tuberomammilary nucleus (TMN) of the hypothalamus form a widely projecting, wake-active network that sustains arousal. Yet most histaminergic neurons contain GABA. Selective siRNA knockdown of the vesicular GABA transporter (vgat, SLC32A1) in histaminergic neurons produced hyperactive mice with an exceptional amount of sustained wakefulness. Ablation of the vgat gene throughout the TMN further sharpened this phenotype. Optogenetic stimulation in the caudate-putamen and neocortex of “histaminergic” axonal projections from the TMN evoked tonic (extrasynaptic) GABAA receptor Cl− currents onto medium spiny neurons and pyramidal neurons. These currents were abolished following vgat gene removal from the TMN area. Thus wake-active histaminergic neurons generate a paracrine GABAergic signal that serves to provide a brake on overactivation from histamine, but could also increase the precision of neocortical processing. The long range of histamine-GABA axonal projections suggests that extrasynaptic inhibition will be coordinated over large neocortical and striatal areas.

Publication status

published

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Journal / series

Volume

87 (1)

Pages / Article No.

164 - 178

Publisher

Cell Press

Event

Edition / version

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Organisational unit

03774 - Hahnloser, Richard H.R. / Hahnloser, Richard H.R. check_circle

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