1. CB1R dysfunction of inhibitory synapses in the ACC drives chronic social isolation stress-induced social impairments in male mice.
- Author
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Guo, Baolin, Xi, Kaiwen, Mao, Honghui, Ren, Keke, Xiao, Haoxiang, Hartley, Nolan D., Zhang, Yangming, Kang, Junjun, Liu, Yingying, Xie, Yuqiao, Zhou, Yongsheng, Zhu, Yuanyuan, Zhang, Xia, Fu, Zhanyan, Chen, Jiang-Fan, Hu, Hailan, Wang, Wenting, and Wu, Shengxi
- Abstract
Social isolation is a risk factor for multiple mood disorders. Specifically, social isolation can remodel the brain, causing behavioral abnormalities, including sociability impairments. Here, we investigated social behavior impairment in mice following chronic social isolation stress (CSIS) and conducted a screening of susceptible brain regions using functional readouts. CSIS enhanced synaptic inhibition in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), particularly at inhibitory synapses of cholecystokinin (CCK)-expressing interneurons. This enhanced synaptic inhibition in the ACC was characterized by CSIS-induced loss of presynaptic cannabinoid type-1 receptors (CB1Rs), resulting in excessive axonal calcium influx. Activation of CCK-expressing interneurons or conditional knockdown of CB1R expression in CCK-expressing interneurons specifically reproduced social impairment. In contrast, optogenetic activation of CB1R or administration of CB1R agonists restored sociability in CSIS mice. These results suggest that the CB1R may be an effective therapeutic target for preventing CSIS-induced social impairments by restoring synaptic inhibition in the ACC. [Display omitted] • CSIS enhances local inhibition in the ACC via influencing CCK-expressing interneurons • Excessive GABA release causally contributes to CSIS-induced social impairments • Loss of presynaptic CB1R in CCK-expressing interneurons drives inhibitory enhancement • Targeting CB1R corrects CSIS-induced social avoidance Guo et al. uncover cell-specific mechanisms in the anterior cingulate cortex that underlie the social impairments resulting from chronic social isolation and reveal a potential therapeutic strategy targeting the cannabinoid type-1 receptors (CB1Rs) to correct social avoidance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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