The Journal of Neuroscience, September 1, 2002, 22(17):7754-7765
Hypocretin Increases Impulse Flow in the Septohippocampal
GABAergic Pathway: Implications for Arousal via a Mechanism of
Hippocampal Disinhibition
Min
Wu1,
Zongming
Zhang1,
Csaba
Leranth2, 4,
Changqing
Xu1,
Anthony N.
van den
Pol3, and
Meenakshi
Alreja1, 4
Departments of 1 Psychiatry, 2 Obstetrics
and Gynecology, 3 Neurosurgery, and
4 Neurobiology, Yale University School of Medicine and the
Ribicoff Research Facilities, Connecticut Mental Health Center, New
Haven, Connecticut 06508
Hypocretins (Hcrts), or orexins, are a recently described set of
hypothalamic peptides that have been implicated in feeding, neuroendocrine regulation, sleep-wakefulness, and disorders of sleep,
such as narcolepsy. Hcrt-containing neurons, which are located
exclusively in the lateral hypothalamic area, provide a dense
innervation to the medial septum/diagonal band of Broca (MSDB), a
sleep-associated brain region that has been suggested to show intense
axonal degeneration in canine narcoleptics. The MSDB, via its
cholinergic and GABAergic projections to the hippocampus, controls the
hippocampal theta rhythm and associated learning and memory functions
that occur during exploratory behavior and rapid eye movement sleep.
Neurons of the MSDB express the Hcrt receptor 2, which is mutated in
canine narcoleptics, but lack the Hcrt receptor 1 mRNA. In the present
study, we investigated the electrophysiological effects of Hcrt2 on
MSDB neurons from rat brain slices. We report that Hcrt2 produces a
reversible, reproducible, concentration-dependent and direct
postsynaptic excitation of GABA-type neurons of the MSDB with an
EC50 of 207 nM. This effect is sodium dependent
but not potassium or chloride dependent and is attenuated by blockers
of the Na+-Ca+ exchanger. Hcrt2
also increases impulse-dependent release of GABA within the MSDB. Using
recordings from retrogradely labeled septohippocampal neurons, we found
that Hcrt2-excited MSDB neurons project to the hippocampus and have a
GABAergic physiological signature. Double-immunolabeling studies
confirmed the presence of Hcrt receptor-2 immunoreactivity in
septohippocampal GABAergic neurons, as well as the presence of Hcrt
fibers adjacent to these neurons. Based on these results, we speculate
that Hcrt2-induced activation of septohippocampal GABAergic neurons
will, by engaging disinhibitory mechanisms in the hippocampus, promote
generation of the hippocampal theta rhythm and associated behaviors.
Key words:
theta rhythm; hypocretin; orexin; sleep; memory; cognition; disinhibition; cataplexy; narcolepsy
Copyright © 2002 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/02/22177754-12$05.00/0