Rapid communicationSerotonin-CRF interaction in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis: A light microscopic double-label immunocytochemical analysis
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Psychological mechanisms and functions of 5-HT and SSRIs in potential therapeutic change: Lessons from the serotonergic modulation of action selection, learning, affect, and social cognition
2020, Neuroscience and Biobehavioral ReviewsCitation Excerpt :Systems involved in responding to explicit threats cues in part involve connections between the amygdala, hypothalamus, and brain stem – in service of engendering quick physiological and behavioural responses. However, sustained threat systems are responsive to less specific threats and unpredictable contexts and are thought to rely on a circuit between the amygdala and the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) partially via corticotropin-releasing factor (CRH) neurons (Davis et al., 2010), which also receives input from dorsal raphe serotonergic neurons (Phelix et al., 1992). ATD has been shown to increase CRH levels (Tyrka et al., 2004) while chronic SSRIs show the opposite effect (De Bellis et al., 1993).
Female rat sexual behavior is unaffected by perinatal fluoxetine exposure
2020, PsychoneuroendocrinologyCitation Excerpt :Overall, this suggests that the 5-HT exposure during early development can affect the onset of puberty and estrous cyclicity. Serotonergic signaling from the DRN strongly innervates other parts of the brain (Phelix et al., 1992; Simerly et al., 1985), and these projections are known to also mediate hypothalamic estrogen receptor (ER) expression (Ito et al., 2014). The VMN, POA, MePD, and DRN are brain regions known for its role in the regulation in female sexual behavior (Arendash and Gorski, 1983; Hoshina et al., 1994; Kato and Sakuma, 2000; Kondo and Sakuma, 2005; Mathews and Edwards, 1977; Pfaff and Sakuma, 1979), and contain high levels of ERα (Laflamme et al., 1998; Yamada et al., 2009).
Oxytocin induces penile erection and yawning when injected into the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis: A microdialysis and immunohistochemical study
2019, Behavioural Brain ResearchCitation Excerpt :The present interpretation is also supported by IHC, which shows that oxytocin neurons run close not only to NO synthase-labelled cell bodies (see above) but also to TH-labelled (possibly dopaminergic) neurons, both surrounded by V-GLUT1-stained synapses (see Fig. 7). Alternatively, D1 receptors whose blockade by SCH 23390 abolishes oxytocin behavioral responses might be located in other neurons yet to be identified, which may project back to the hypothalamus (lateral or PVN or MPOA) and/or to the VTA, the ventral subiculum/amygdala [33–38], leading in turn to the activation of the neural pathways that mediate penile erection and yawning present in these areas (see [23,28,29,40–42,60]). The two possibilities may also be not mutually exclusive.
Oxytocin induces penile erection and yawning when injected into the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis: Involvement of glutamic acid, dopamine, and nitric oxide
2017, Hormones and BehaviorCitation Excerpt :A unifying interpretation of the available results that explains how oxytocin injected into the BNST induces penile erection and yawning might be the following (see Fig. 10). Oxytocin injected into the BNST induces these behavioral responses by acting on oxytocin receptors located in the synapses of excitatory (glutamatergic) neurons, whose cell bodies are located in the amygdala and/or in the hippocampal ventral subiculum (see De Olmos and Ingram, 1972; Phelix et al., 1992; Morari et al., 1998; Hasue and Shammah-Lagnado, 2002; Meloni et al., 2006). The activation of oxytocin receptors leads, in turn, to the release of glutamic acid, which acts on excitatory amino acid receptors located mainly in glutamatergic neurons that project to the hypothalamus (lateral hypothalamus, medial preoptic area and the PVN) and/or back to the ventral tegmental area, the ventral subiculum, and the amygdala (see De Olmos and Ingram, 1972; Phelix et al., 1992; Morari et al., 1998; Hasue and Shammah-Lagnado, 2002; Meloni et al., 2006).
Neural Circuitry of Stress, Fear, and Anxiety: Focus on Extended Amygdala Corticotropin-Releasing Factor Systems
2017, Stress: Neuroendocrinology and NeurobiologySex Differences in the Social Behavior Network and Mesolimbic Dopamine System
2015, Sex Differences in the Central Nervous System