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Altered synaptic plasticity of the longitudinal dentate gyrus network in noise-induced anxiety

  • Sojeong Pak*
  • , Gona Choi
  • , Jaydeep Roy
  • , Chi Him Poon
  • , Jinho Lee
  • , Dajin Cho
  • , Minseok Lee
  • , Lee Wei Lim
  • , Shaowen Bao
  • , Sunggu Yang*
  • , Sungchil Yang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • City University of Hong Kong
  • The University of Hong Kong
  • Incheon National University
  • University of Arizona

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Anxiety is characteristic comorbidity of noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL), which causes physiological changes within the dentate gyrus (DG), a subfield of the hippocampus that modulates anxiety. However, which DG circuit underlies hearing loss-induced anxiety remains unknown. We utilize an NIHL mouse model to investigate short- and long-term synaptic plasticity in DG networks. The recently discovered longitudinal DG-DG network is a collateral of DG neurons synaptically connected with neighboring DG neurons and displays robust synaptic efficacy and plasticity. Furthermore, animals with NIHL demonstrate increased anxiety-like behaviors similar to a response to chronic restraint stress. These behaviors are concurrent with enhanced synaptic responsiveness and suppressed short- and long-term synaptic plasticity in the longitudinal DG-DG network but not in the transverse DG-CA3 connection. These findings suggest that DG-related anxiety is typified by synaptic alteration in the longitudinal DG-DG network.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104364
JournaliScience
Volume25
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 17 Jun 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Behavioral neuroscience
  • Biological sciences
  • Neuroscience

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