Posted by Alumni from Nature
April 19, 2024
The work, published in Cell Reports on 27 March1, describes a previously uncharacterized cluster of brain cells that fire when a mouse is made to feel nauseous, but don't fire when the mouse is simply full. This suggests that responses to satiety and nausea are governed by separate brain circuits. 'With artificial activation of this neuron, the mouse just doesn't eat, even if it is super hungry,' says Wenyu Ding at the Max Planck Institute for Biological Intelligence in Martinsried, Germany, who led the study. Ding and colleagues suspected that this group of neurons was involved in processing negative experiences, such as feeling queasy, so they injected the mice with a chemical that induces nausea and then scanned the animals' brains. This confirmed that the neurons are active when mice feel nauseous. Using a light-based technique called optogenetics, the team artificially activated the neurons of mice that had been deprived of food in the hours before the experiment. When the... learn more