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Cholinergic dysfunction in the dorsal striatum promotes habit formation and maladaptive eating

Authors :
Favier, Mathieu
Janickova, Helena
Justo, Damian
Kljakic, Ornela
Runtz, Leonie
Natsheh, Joman Y.
Pascoal, Tharick A.
Germann, Jurgen
Gallino, Daniel
Kang, Jun-Il
Meng, Xiang Qi
Antinora, Christina
Raulic, Sanda
Jacobsen, Jacob P.R.
Moquin, Luc
Vigneault, Erika
Gratton, Alain
Caron, Marc G.
Duriez, Philibert
Brandon, Mark P.
Neto, Pedro Rosa
Chakravarty, M. Mallar
Herzallah, Mohammad M.
Gorwood, Philip
Prado, Marco A.M.
Prado, Vania F.
El Mestikawy, Salah
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. December, 2020, Vol. 130 Issue 12, p6616, 15 p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Dysregulation of habit formation has been recently proposed as pivotal to eating disorders. Here, we report that a subset of patients suffering from restrictive anorexia nervosa have enhanced habit formation compared with healthy controls. Habit formation is modulated by striatal cholinergic interneurons. These interneurons express vesicular transporters for acetylcholine (VAChT) and glutamate (VGLUT3) and use acetylcholine/glutamate cotransmission to regulate striatal functions. Using mice with genetically silenced VAChT (VAChT conditional KO, VAChTcKO) or VGLUT3 (VGLUT3cKO), we investigated the roles that acetylcholine and glutamate released by cholinergic interneurons play in habit formation and maladaptive eating. Silencing glutamate favored goal-directed behaviors and had no impact on eating behavior. In contrast, VAChTcKO mice were more prone to habits and maladaptive eating. Specific deletion of VAChT in the dorsomedial striatum of adult mice was sufficient to phenocopy maladaptive eating behaviors of VAChTcKO mice. Interestingly, VAChTcKO mice had reduced dopamine release in the dorsomedial striatum but not in the dorsolateral striatum. The dysfunctional eating behavior of VAChTcKO mice was alleviated by donepezil and by l-DOPA, confirming an acetylcholine/dopamine deficit. Our study reveals that loss of acetylcholine leads to a dopamine imbalance in striatal compartments, thereby promoting habits and vulnerability to maladaptive eating in mice.<br />Introduction Eating disorders such as anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and binge eating disorder are severe psychiatric illnesses that are difficult to treat (1). Anorexia nervosa, in particular, has the highest [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
130
Issue :
12
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.644418777
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI138532