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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Nov 17.
Published in final edited form as: Mol Psychiatry. 2020 Jun 17;26(9):5213–5228. doi: 10.1038/s41380-020-0810-9

Dysfunction of ventral tegmental area GABA neurons causes mania-like behavior

Xiao Yu 1,✉,#, Wei Ba 1,#, Guangchao Zhao 2,#, Ying Ma 1, Edward C Harding 1, Lu Yin 2, Dan Wang 2, Huiming Li 2, Peng Zhang 2, Youran Shi 1, Raquel Yustos 1, Alexei L Vyssotski 3, Hailong Dong 2, Nicholas P Franks 1,4,, William Wisden 1,4,
PMCID: PMC8589652  EMSID: EMS118262  PMID: 32555422

Abstract

The ventral tegmental area (VTA), an important source of dopamine, regulates goal- and reward-directed and social behaviors, wakefulness and sleep. Hyperactivation of dopamine neurons generates behavioral pathologies. But any roles of non-dopamine VTA neurons in psychiatric illness have been little explored. Lesioning or chemogenetically inhibiting VTA GABAergic (VTAVgat) neurons generated persistent wakefulness with mania-like qualities: locomotor activity was increased; sensitivity to D-amphetamine was heightened; immobility times decreased on the tail suspension and forced swim tests; and sucrose preference increased. Furthermore, after sleep deprivation, mice with lesioned VTAVgat neurons did not catch up on lost sleep, even though they were starting from a sleep-deprived baseline, suggesting that sleep homeostasis was bypassed. The mania-like behaviors, including the sleep loss, were reversed by valproate, and re-emerged when treatment was stopped. Lithium salts and lamotrigine, however, had no effect. Low doses of diazepam partially reduced the hyperlocomotion and fully recovered the immobility time during tail suspension. The mania like-behaviors mostly depended on dopamine, because giving D1/D2/D3 receptor antagonists reduced these behaviors, but also partially on VTAVgat projections to the lateral hypothalamus (LH). Optically or chemogenetically inhibiting VTAVgat terminals in the LH elevated locomotion and decreased immobility time during the tail suspension and forced swimming tests. VTAVgat neurons help set an animal’s (and perhaps human’s) mental and physical activity levels. Inputs inhibitingVTAVgat neurons intensify wakefulness (increased activity, enhanced alertness and motivation), qualities useful for acute survival. In the extreme, however, decreased or failed inhibition from VTAVgat neurons produces mania-like qualities (hyperactivity, hedonia, decreased sleep).

Introduction

During the mania phase of bipolar disorder, patients sleep little and have elevated mood (e.g. increased energy and hyperactivity, impulsivity, decreased depression)15. In mice, pathological hyperactivity and elevated mood can be generated by various gene mutations and deletions: e.g. Clock Δ196, REV-erb α7, ErbB4 tyrosine kinase deletion in noradrenergic locus ceruleus cells8, GSK-3β overexpression9, dopamine transporter knockdown10, 11, SHANK2 knockout12, SHANK3 overexpression13, ANK3 disruptions14, ionotropic glutamate/AMPA receptor GluA1 knockout15, ionotropic glutamate/kainate GluK2 knockout16, phospholipase c γ1 knockout17, histidine triad nucleotide-binding protein 1 knockout18, glutamate-cysteine ligase modifier unit knockout19,and the Na/K-ATPase α3 Myshkin (Myk/+) mutation 2022. Some of these gene manipulations alter excitation-inhibition (E-I) balance8, 13, 15, 16, 23, and/or elevate catecholamines68, 10, 24, suggesting common themes that could underlie the emergence of some types of mania.

Both these themes come together in the ventral tegmental area (VTA). The VTA an important source of dopamine, regulates goal- and reward-directed and social behaviors25, 26, as well as wakefulness and sleep 2729. Exciting VTA dopamine neurons with well-chosen rhythms can produce mania-like behaviors in the day and euthymia at night 30. In addition to dopamine neurons, there is a rich heterogeneity of glutamate and GABA neurons in the different anatomical subdomains of the VTA, and neurotransmitter co-release (e.g. dopamine -glutamate, GABA-glutamate, GABA-dopamine) from VTA neurons is common25, 3133.

For this paper, we focus on the midline VTA, which contains GABA (VTAVgat) and glutamate/nitric oxide synthase (VTAVglut2) neurons25, 28, 3437. These VTAVgat and VTAVglut2/NOS1 neurons inhibit and excite, respectively, the dopamine cells, but also, by projecting out of the VTA, exert effects independent of dopamine 25, 28, 36. The VTAVgat neurons co-release GABA and glutamate33, but the majority of these VTA neurons’ actions locally are GABAergic28. Locally they mostly inhibit VTAVglut2, VTADA and VTAVglut2/DA cells, but also elicit a small number of pure excitatory responses 28. Chemogenetic inhibition and chronic lesion of midline VTAVgat neurons causes sustained wakefulness28, 29, and excitation of VTAVglut2 cells and VTA dopamine cells also causes wakefulness28,27. VTAVgat neurons limit arousal by inhibiting dopamine neurons and via projections to the lateral hypothalamus (LH)28, 36, 38; VTAVglut2 neurons produce wakefulness, also independently of dopamine, by projecting to the LH and nucleus accumbens 28.

Here, we characterize the type of wakefulness produced by inhibiting or lesioning the VTAVgat neurons or exciting VTAVglut2 neurons. We find that the wakefulness induced by diminishing or removing VTAVgat neuron inhibition contains behavioral endophenotypes that are mania-like, and are treatable with valproate and diazepam, although not with lithium or lamotrigine. On the other hand, the extended but quiet wakefulness produced by activating midline VTAVglut2 neurons has no endophenotypes characteristic of mania. We suggest that the mania-like symptoms resulting from diminished VTAVgat function are generated by changing the E-I balance in both the VTA and the LH.

Material and Methods

Mice and housing

All experiments were performed in accordance with the UK Home Office Animal Procedures Act (1986); all procedures were approved by the Imperial College Ethical Review Committee and the Ethics Committee for Animal Experimentation of Xijing Hospital, Xi’an, and were conducted according to the Guidelines for Animal Experimentation of the Chinese Council institutes. The following strains of mice were used: Vgat-ires-Cre: Slc32a1tm2(cre)Lowl/J kindly provided by B.B. Lowell, JAX stock 01696239; Vglut2-ires-Cre: Slc17a6tm2(cre)Lowl/J, kindly provided by B.B. Lowell, JAX stock 01696339. Mice were maintained on a 12 hr:12 hr light:dark cycle at constant temperature and humidity with ad libitum food and water. The “lights-on” period started at 6:00 pm (18:00); the “lights-off” period started at 6:00 am (06:00). Lighting intensity was around 5 Lux during the red light “lights off period”; and the white light level around 150 Lux during the “lights on” period.

AAV

pAAV-hSyn-DIO-hM4Di-mCherry, pAAV-hSyn-DIO-hM3Dq-mCherry and pAAV-hSyn-DIO-mCherry were gifts from Bryan L. Roth (Addgene plasmid 44362, 44361 and 50459)40; pAAV-EF1 α-DIO-taCASP3-TEV was a gift from Nirao Shah (Addgene plasmid 45580) 41; we packaged the transgenes into AAV capsids (capsid serotype 1/2) in house as described previously42, 43. rAAV2/9-EF1a-DIO-eNpHR3.0-mCherry and rAAV2/9-EF1a-DIO-ChR2-mCherry were packaged by BrainVTA (Wuhan, China).

Surgery

10-12-week-old male mice were anesthetized with 2% isoflurane in oxygen by inhalation and received buprenorphine (0.1 mg/kg) and carprofen (5 mg/kg) injections, and then placed on a stereotaxic frame (Angle Two, Leica Microsystems, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, UK). The AAV was injected through a stainless steel 33-gauge/15mm/PST3 internal cannula (Hamilton) attached to a 10 μl Hamilton syringe, at a rate of 0.1 μl min−1. For the AAV injections, virus was bilaterally injected into the VTA, 50 nl for each side of the VTA. The injection co-ordinates were VTA: (ML = ±0.35 mm, AP = -3.52 mm, DV = -4.25 mm). After injection, the cannula was left at the injection site for 5 min and then slowly pulled out. After injections, mice that were to undergo the sleep experiments were implanted with 3 gold-plated miniature screw electrodes (–1.5 mm Bregma, +1.5 mm midline; +1.5 mm Bregma, –1.5 mm midline; –1 mm Lambda, 0 mm midline – reference electrode) with two EMG wire (AS634, Cooner Wire, CA). The EMG electrodes were inserted between the neck musculature. The Neurologger 2A EEG-EMG device44 was affixed to the skull with Orthodontic Resin power and Orthodontic Resin liquid (Tocdental, UK). For the fiber optogenetic and chemogenetic experiments, after virus injection above the VTA (ML = ±0.35 mm; AP = −3.52 mm; DV = −4.25 mm), mice received surgical bilateral implantations above the LH of a monofiberoptic cannula (ML = ±0.36 mm; AP = −3.54 mm; DV = −4.0 mm) (200 μm; Doric Lenses, Inc., Quebec, Canada) or guide cannula (ML = ±0.36 mm; AP = −3.54 mm; DV = −3.5 mm) (World precision instruments, USA) for CNO delivery.

Drug treatments

For all drug treatments, mice first received vehicle injections, and behavioral tests were performed; 2 weeks later, the same group of mice were given drug injections, and behavioral tests were performed. For the long-term valproate treatments, we further tested mice behaviors 2 weeks after valproate treatment was withdrawn. Baseline behaviors of the mice were tested during this period without any treatment.

Chemogenetics

Clozapine-N-oxide (CNO) (C0832, Sigma-Aldrich, dissolved in saline, 1 mg/kg) or saline was injected i.p. 30 minutes before the start of the behavioral tests. For VTAVgat-hM4Di mice or VTAVglut2-hM3Dq mice, CNO or saline was injected during the “lights off” active phase. 1 μl of 1 mM CNO was infused into the LH through the guide cannula at a rate of 0.1 μl min−1 with an injector needle (33-gauge, Hamilton)

D-amphetamine

D-Amphetamine (2813/100, Tocris Bioscience, dissolved in saline, 2 mg/kg) or saline was injected i.p. into the mice 13, 21, and the mice were assessed directly after D-amphetamine injection.

Valproate, lithium, diazepam and lamotrigine

Sodium valproate (2815, TOCRIS, dissolved in saline, 200 mg/kg), LiCl (Sigma-Aldrich, dissolved in saline, 100 mg/kg) or saline (vehicle) was injected i.p. into the mice. For acute treatments (repeated injections) with lithium or valproate, mice received vehicle injections, and then behaviors (locomotion and tail-suspension) were tested; after 2 weeks, the same group of mice were given lithium or valproate injections. For the Li-H2O treatment, mice were treated with LiCl in drinking water (300 mg/L) for 2 weeks. Mice were first given normal water, and behaviors were tested, and the same group of mice were placed on Li-H2O for 2 weeks. Valproate or LiCl treatments were as previously reported13, 17: valproate or LiCl were injected 3 times (10:00, 14:00 and 17:00) one day before the behavioral assays; and during the day of the behavioral assay, valproate or LiCl was injected 2 times (10:00, 14:00). Locomotion or tail-suspension tests were performed 30 min after injection (14:30). After the locomotion or tail-suspension tests (see below), mice received a final valproate injection (17:00), and then the 24-hour sleep-wake recordings were then performed (see section “EEG analysis, sleep-wake behavior and sleep deprivation”).

Diazepam (2805, TOCRIS, dissolved in 0.9% saline containing 0.1% Tween 80, 1 mg/kg) and lamotrigine (1611, TOCRIS, diluted in 0.9% saline, 10 mg/kg) or their control vehicles were injected i.p. into the mice. For single treatments with diazepam (1 mg/kg) or lamotrigine (10 mg/kg), mice received vehicle injections, and then behaviors (locomotion and tail-suspension) were tested; after 2 weeks, the same group of mice were given diazepam or lamotrigine injections (14:00). For repeated treatments, diazepam (1 mg/kg) or lamotrigine (10 mg/kg) were injected 3 times (10:00, 14:00 and 17:00) one day before the behavioral assays; and during the day of the behavioral assay, diazepam or lamotrigine were injected 2 times (10:00, 14:00). The locomotion or tail-suspension tests were performed 30 min after injection (14:30).

Serum lithium

Blood samples were collected before and after lithium injections via transcutaneous cardiac puncture and the serum was separated for determination of lithium levels. Mice were maintained on anesthesia and blood samples were collected directly from the left ventricle before killing them. Serum lithium was analyzed using a Roche Cobas c311 analyzer.

Dopamine receptor antagonists experiment

Dopamine antagonists SCH-23390 (0.03 mg/kg, dissolved in saline) and raclopride (1 mg/kg, dissolved in saline), for D1 and D2/D3 receptors respectively, were injected serially i.p. into the VTAVgat-mCherry mice or VTAVgat-CASP3 mice 20 minutes before the locomotion, TST or sleep experiment. For the experiments with chemogenetic inhibition combined with dopamine receptor antagonists, SCH-23390 and raclopride were injected serially i.p. into the VTAVgat-hM4Di mice, and 20 minutes later, saline or CNO was injected into the antagonists-injected mice, and 30 minutes later, the locomotion test and TST was performed.

Locomotor activity

The locomotor activity and time spent in stereotypy was detected in an activity test chamber (Med Associates, Inc) with an ANY-maze video tracking system (FUJIFILM co.) and measured by ANY-maze software (Stoelting Co. US.). VTAVgat-mCherry or VTAVgat-CASP3 mice were directly put into the activity test chamber; for VTAVgat-hM4Di mice, the mice were put into the test chamber 30 minutes after saline or CNO injection;for D-Amphetamine experiments, mice were first put into chamber for 30 min, and the mice received vehicle or amphetamine injections. The locomotor activity was detected straight after injection for 1-h.

Home cage activity

Mice were habituated in the cage for 24 h with mock Neurologgers before recordings. The home cage activities were then recorded using the accelerometer built into the Neurologger 2A devices44 for a 24-h period and analyzed using Spike2 software.

Tail-suspension test (TST)

The TST was performed as described13. After a habituation period in the test room, mice were suspended 60 cm above the floor by their tails by taping the tail tip. Behaviors were video recorded and blindly scored manually and measured by ANY-maze software (Stoelting Co. US.).

Forced swimming test (FST)

Mice were placed in a borosilicate glass cylinder (5L, 18 cm diameter, 27 cm high) filled with water (25 °C, water depth 14 cm) for 6 min. The immobility time during the last 4 min was manually measured. Immobility time was defined as the time spent without any movements except for a single limb paddling to maintain flotation.

Sucrose preference test (SPT)

This was a 2-choice test between 1% sucrose and water. Mice were habituated to a dual delivery system (one bottle with water and one bottle with 1% sucrose) for 3 days. Sucrose preference was then assessed over 3 consecutive days. For the chemogenetic experiments, animals were water-restricted overnight before saline or CNO injection. 30 min after saline or CNO injection, the mice were given free access to the 2-water delivery system for 4 hours. Sucrose preference (%) was calculated as (weight of sucrose consumed) / (weight of water consumed + weight of sucrose consumed) × 100%.

Elevated plus maze test

The elevated plus maze apparatus (Global Biotech Inc. Shanghai) was opaque and consisted of a central platform (10 cm x 10 cm), two open arms (50 cm x 10 cm), and two closed arms (50 cm x 10 cm) with protective walls 40 cm high which was 70 cm above the ground. Animals were placed in the central platform facing one open arm of the apparatus and were free to explore the arms for 5 min. The apparatus was cleaned with 75% ethanol before and after each session. The traces were recorded by an overhead camera and shown by average heatmap of each group. The ratio of exploring time in the open arm was calculated by Video Tracking Software (ANY-maze, Stoelting Co., Ltd.).

Timing of behavioral tests

10-12 weeks male mice were given virus injection (see Surgery section), and 4-6 weeks after this, behavioral tests were performed (the mice were approximately 14-18 weeks old by this stage), or drug treatments were started. During the drug treatment experiments, after vehicle injections, behavioral tests were performed (the mice were approximately 14-18 weeks old); and 2 weeks later, mice received drug injection, and behavioral tests were performed (by this stage, the mice were approximately 16-20 weeks old). All behavioral tests (locomotion, TST, FST or SPT) took place during the “lights-off” phase of the light-dark cycle, when the mice were most active, particularly between 14:00 pm-17:00 (2 PM-5 PM), except for the sleep deprivation experiments (see section “EEG analysis, sleep-wake behavior and sleep deprivation ).

Mouse groupings for behavioral tests

For chemogenetic experiments, VTAVgat-hM4Di mice were randomly split into two groups that received saline or CNO injection, and the locomotion test, TST, FST or SPT were then performed. After 1-2 weeks, the same mice were given CNO or saline injection, and the locomotion test, TST, FST or SPT were again performed. For the saline control experiments, VTAVgat-hM4Di mice received saline injections, and then the locomotion test, TST, FST or SPT were performed, and after 1-2 weeks, the same mice were given saline injection, and the locomotion test, TST, FST or SPT were performed.

EEG analysis, sleep-wake behavior and sleep deprivation

EEG and EMG signals were recorded using Neurologger 2A devices28, 44. NREM sleep and wake states were automatically classified using a sleep analysis software Spike2 and then manually scored. The sleep deprivation protocol was as described previously45. At the start of ‘lights on’ period, when sleep pressure is the highest, mice fitted with Neurologgers were put into novel cages, and at one-hour intervals, novel objects were introduced. After 5 hours sleep deprivation, mice were then put back into their home cages for 19 hours. In total, a 24-hour sleep-wake state was recorded. For the sleep experiments with dopamine receptor antagonists, mice were given SCH-23390 (0.03 mg/kg) and raclopride (2 mg/kg) injections in the middle of the ‘lights off’ active period.

Optogenetic stimulation

For the optogenetic behavioral experiments, a fiber patch cord was connected to the laser generator, and dual optic fibers were connected to the fiber patch through a rotary joint (ThinkerTech Nanjing BioScience Inc. China.). Before the experiments, a monofiberoptic cannula was connected to the fiber patch cord. VTAVgat-eNpHR-mCherry→LH mice or VTAVgat-ChR2-mCherry→LH mice were bilaterally opto-stimulated (20 Hz, 0.5 s duration with 0.5 s interval, 593 nm, 20 μW) in the LH during the “lights off” phase. The stimulation was given for the duration of the behavioral tests.

Immunohistochemistry

These procedures were carried as described previously28. Primary antibodies used were rat monoclonal mCherry (1:2000, Thermo Fisher, M11217); mouse monoclonal TH (1:2000, Sigma, T2928); secondary antibodies were Alexa Fluor 488 goat anti-mouse (1:1000, Invitrogen Molecular Probes, A11001), Alexa Fluor 594 goat anti-rat (1:1000, Invitrogen Molecular Probes, A11007). Slices were mounted on slides, embedded in Mowiol (with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole), cover-slipped, and analyzed using an upright fluorescent microscope (Nikon Eclipse 80i, Nikon).

Slice electrophysiology

Three weeks after injection of AAV2/9-hSyn-DIO-hM3Dq-mCherry into the VTA of VGlut2-Cre mice, brain slices containing the VTA were prepared for electrophysiological recordings. Mice were anesthetized with isoflurane and then killed. Brains were rapidly removed and placed in ice-cold oxygenated cutting ACSF (containing in mM: 252 sucrose, 2.5 KCl, 6 MgSO4, 0.5 CaCl2, 1.2 NaH2PO4, 2.5 NaHCO3, 10 glucose). Horizontal VTA slices (300 μm) were cut using a vibratome (VT1200S, Leica). Brain slices containing the VTA were transferred to recording ACSF with 124 mM NaCl, 2.5 mM KCl, 1.2 mM NaH2PO4, 2 mM MgSO4, 2 mM CaCl2, 24 mM NaHCO3, 5mM HEPES and 12.5 mM glucose. Brain slices were incubated at 34?for 30 min and were then kept at room temperature under the same conditions for 45 min before transfer to the recording chamber at room temperature (22-25°C). The ACSF was perfused at 2 mL/min. The brain slices were visualized with a fixed upright microscope (BX51WI, Olympus) equipped with a water immersion lens (40X/0.8 W) and a digital camera (C13440, Hamamatsu). Patch pipettes were pulled from borosilicate glass capillary tubes using a pipette puller (P97, Sutter). The resistance of pipettes varied between 3 and 5 MΩ. For current clamp recording of action potentials, pipettes were filled with solution (130 mM potassium gluconate, 4 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl2, 4 mM ATP-Mg, 10 mM phosphocreatine, 0.3 mM EGTA, 0.3 mM GTP-Na, 10 mM HEPES, pH 7.3). The hM3Dq-mCherry-positive neurons in the VTA were patched in current-clamp mode. We injected a constant positive current to bring the membrane potential to around −45 mV to induce stable and persistent AP firing. CNO (100μM) was bath applied. The signals were recorded with a MultiClamp 700B amplifier (Molecular Devices), Digidata 1550 interface, and Clampex 10.6 software (Molecular Devices).

Quantification and statistics

Statistical tests were run in “Origin 2019b” (Origin Lab). The individual tests, and the number (n) of mice for each experimental group/condition, are given in the figure legends. All data are given as mean ± SEM and ‘center values’ are the means. We tested for normality and equal variances. When the data were non-normal, we used non-parametric tests (stated in relevant figure legends). Mice were assigned randomly to the experimental and control groups. For chemogenetic experiments, saline or CNO injection was blinded. For analyzing chronic lesioning experiments, VTAVgat-mCherry and VTAVgat-CASP3 mice, experimenters were blinded. For drug treatments, vehicle or drug injections were not done blinded. Experimental data analysis, including animal behavior that was scored from videos and the analysis of EEG data, was done blinded.

Results

Chemogenetic inhibition or lesioning of VTAVgat neurons produces increased locomotor activity and sensitivity to amphetamine

We delivered AAV-DIO-hM4Di-mCherry into the VTA of Vgat-ires-cre mice to express hM4Di-mCherry (an inhibitory receptor activated by the CNO ligand40) specifically in VTAVgat neurons to generate VTAVgat-hM4Di mice (Figure 1a)28. As previously28, we also ablated VTAVgat neurons by injecting AAV-DIO-CASP3 and/or AAV-DIO-mCherry (as a control) into the VTA of Vgat-ires-cre mice to generate VTAVgat-CASP3 mice and VTAVgat-mCherry mice respectively. After 5-6 weeks post-injection, mCherry-positive VTAVgat neurons were detected in control mice that had only received AAV-DIO-mCherry injections, whereas mCherry-positive VTAVgat neurons were mostly absent in caspase-injected mice (Figure 1b), but tyrosine hydroxylase-positive (dopamine) neurons were still present (Figure 1b).

Figure 1. Selective inhibition or lesioning of VTAVgat neurons increased locomotor activity and sensitivity to D-amphetamine-induced hyperlocomotion.

Figure 1

(a) Generation of VTAVgat-hM4Di mice. Staining by immunohistochemistry (mCherry, red) for hM4Di-mCherry expression in the VTA. Scale bar: 150 μm.

(b) Generation of VTAVgat-CASP3 and VTAVgat-mCherry control mice. Immunohistochemical staining for mCherry (red) and dopamine neurons (TH, tyrosine hydroxylase, green) in the VTA of control mice that expressed mCherry in VTAVgat neurons (left-hand images), or in mice where VTAVgat neurons were lesioned with caspase (right-hand images). Scale bar: 150 μm.

(c) Video-tracked paths, locomotion speed and distance travelled of VTAVgat-hM4Di mice (n=8 mice) following CNO (1 mg/kg) injection compared with saline injection in the open field over a 30-minute period. Paired t-test, t(7)=-3.68, **p=0.007.

(d) Video-tracked paths, locomotion speed and distance travelled of VTAVgat-mCherry (n=8 mice) and VTAVgat-CASP3 mice (n=9 mice) in the open field over a 30-minute period. Unpaired t-test, t(15)=-5.43, ****p=0.00006.

(e) Locomotion speed and distance traveled of VTAVgat-hM4Di mice (n=6 mice) in the open field after saline or D-amphetamine injection (subsequent to saline or CNO injection). Repeated measures two-way ANOVA and Bonferroni-Holm post hoc test. F(1,5)=66. Saline vs. saline + amphetamine t(5)=3.69, *p=0.01; CNO vs. CNO + amphetamine t(5)=13.6, ****p=0.000038.

(f) Locomotion speed and distance traveled in the open field test of VTAVgat-mCherry (n=7 mice) or VTAVgat-CASP3 mice (n=6 mice) after vehicle or D-amphetamine injection.Two-way ANOVA and Bonferroni-Holm post hoc test. F(mCherry or CASP3)=93; F(saline or amphetamine)=26; F(interaction)=5.64; mCherry + vehicle vs. mCherry + amphetamine t(6)=-3.39, *p=0.01; CASP3 + vehicle vs. CASP3 + amphetamine t(5)=-4.97, **p=0.004. All error bars represent the SEM.

We next assessed locomotion behaviors of these animals. After CNO injection, VTAVgat-hM4Di mice had higher locomotor activity in an open-field arena with more distance travelled (Figure 1c) and had elevated average and maximum speeds over 30 min compared with saline-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di mice (Supplementary Figure 1a). As a control, the locomotor baseline activity of VTAVgat-hM4Di mice did not differ over the extended experimental period: mice that received an initial saline injection, and then another saline injection two weeks later, had the same locomotor activity (Supplementary Figure 1b). Consistent with these chemogenetic inhibition results, VTAVgat-CASP3mice also produced hyperlocomotion in the open field – more distance travelled (Figure 1d), and higher average and maximum speeds over 30 min compared with the distance travelled by VTAVgat-mCherry control mice (Figure 1d; Supplementary Figure 1c). VTAVgat-CASP3 mice were also hyperactive in their home cages (Supplementary Figure 1d). Notably, the hyperlocomotion of the VTAVgat-CASP3 mice was still seen when the mice were retested in the open field four months post-lesion (Supplementary Figure 1e). By the end of this period, the body weight of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice was reduced compared with that of VTAVgat-mCherry control mice (Supplementary Figure 1f).

Mice suggested to have mania-like characteristics, or patients with bipolar-related mania, are hypersensitive to D-amphetamine13, 21, whereas mice and patients posited to have an attention deficit hyperactivity (ADHD)-like disorder become less active with D-amphetamine46, 47. Treating CNO-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di mice and VTAVgat-CASP3 mice with D-amphetamine significantly increased their locomotion speed above their high baseline speed, and increased the distance travelled (Figure 1e, f) and the time spent in stereotypy (Supplementary Figure 1g, h), suggesting that both groups of mice (VTAVgat-CASP3 and CNO-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di mice) were not ADHD-like.

Acute inhibition or chronic lesioning of VTAVgat neurons elevates mood

We assessed mood-related behaviors using the tail-suspension test (TST), the forced swimming test (FST), the sucrose preference test (SPT) and the elevated plus maze. During the TST, the immobility times of CNO-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di mice and VTAVgat-CASP3 mice were greatly decreased compared with saline-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di control mice and VTAVgat-mCherry (Figure 2a, b). Both CNO-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di mice and VTAVgat-CASP3 mice also had decreased immobility times during the FST compared with saline-injected or VTAVgat-mCherry controls (Figure 2c, d). This could suggest that reducing VTAVgat neuronal output, by either chemogenetic inhibition or lesioning, produces less depressive-like behaviors. In addition, during the SPT, CNO-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di mice and VTAVgat-CASP3 mice consumed more sucrose than their control littermates (Figure 2e, f), possibly indicating a raised hedonic state. As a control, the baseline behavior of VTAVgat-hM4Di mice did not differ over the extended experimental period: mice that received an initial saline injection, and then another saline injection two weeks later, had the same performance during the TST, FST or SPT (Supplementary Figure 1i). We characterized the anxiety-like behavior of our mouse models using the elevated plus maze. The time spent in the open arms of the maze by both CNO-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di mice and VTAVgat-CASP3 mice increased (Fig 2g, h), suggesting their anxiety was reduced.

Figure 2. Dysfunction of VTAVgat neurons elevates mood and impairs sleep homeostasis.

Figure 2

(a) Immobility time during the tail suspension test (TST) of VTAVgat-hM4Di mice (n=8 mice) after saline or CNO injection. Paired t-test, t(7)=53.8, ****p=1.98e-10.

(b) Immobility time during the during TST of VTAVgat-CASP3 (n=9 mice) or VTAVgat-mCherry mice (n=8 mice). Unpaired t-test, t(15)=14.3, ****p=3.7e-10.

(c) Immobility time during the forced swimming test (FST) of VTAVgat-hM4Di mice (n=6 mice) after saline or CNO injection. Paired t-test, t(5)=5, **p=0.003.

(d) Immobility time during the FST of VTAVgat-CASP3 (n=6 mice) or VTAVgat-mCherry mice (n=6 mice). Unpaired t-test, t(10)=6, ***p=0.0001.

(e) Sucrose preference of VTAVgat-hM4Di mice (n=6 mice) after saline or CNO injection. Paired t-test, t(5)=-3.5, *p=0.01.

(f) Sucrose preference of VTAVgat-CASP3 (n=6 mice) or VTAVgat-mCherry mice (n=8 mice). Unpaired t-test, t(12)=-4.8, ***p=0.0004.

(g) Elevated plus maze: VTAVgat-hM4Di mice received saline injection and two weeks later a second saline injection (n=8 mice), paired t-test, t(7)=-1.06, p=0.32; or saline and two weeks later a CNO injection (n=8 mice), paired t-test, t(7)=-5.28, **p=0.001.

(h) Elevated plus maze of VTAVgat-CASP3 (n=6 mice) or VTAVgat-mCherry mice, paired t-test, t(5)=-3.45, *p=0.01.

(i) The accumulative recovery sleep (time in NREM sleep) after 5 hours of sleep deprivation (SD) of VTAVgat-CASP3 (n=4 mice) or VTAVgat-mCherry mice (n=4 mice). Mann-Whitney test, *p=0.03. The light and dark shading represents the “lights on” and “lights off” phases.

Mice with lesioned VTAVgat neurons have less sleep need after sleep deprivation

VTAVgat-CASP3 mice have a long-term sleep deficit28. To further characterize the need of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice for sleep, we performed a sleep deprivation experiment. After sleep deprivation, there is usually a rebound in lost NREM sleep, a process termed sleep homeostasis48. Mice were kept awake for 5 hours with novel objects presented each hour and were then tested to see if they caught up on lost sleep in their home cage. Control VTAVgat-mCherry mice had rebound NREM sleep after 5 hours sleep deprivation, and thereby after 19 hours they had regained 90% of their sleep loss (Figure 2i). Surprisingly, the VTAVgat-CASP3 mice, despite already starting from a chronic sleep-deprived baseline, did not catch up on lost NREM sleep after 5 hours continuous sleep deprivation (Figure 2i).

The mania-like behavior produced by lesioning VTAVgat neurons can be pharmacologically rescued by valproate and diazepam but not lithium or lamotrigine

We assessed if lithium could treat the manic-like state of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice. We confirmed that serum lithium was elevated to therapeutic levels during the acute treatment (Supplementary Figure 2a), and that the behavioral baselines of VTAVgat-mCherry or VTAVgat-CASP3 mice did not change during the treatment period (Supplementary Figure 2b-f). However, neither acute (100 mg/kg) (Supplementary Figure 3a-e) nor chronic (300 mg/L) treatments (Supplementary Figure 3f-j) had any effects (Of note, chronic Li-H2O treatment decreased the immobility time of control mice during the TST (Supplementary Figure 3i)).

We next examined valproate (200 mg/kg) treatments (Figure 3a). Acute injection of valproate did not affect the locomotor activity of VTAVgat-mCherry control mice (Figure 3b). By contrast, the hyperlocomotor activity of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice in the open field was restored down to control levels by valproate treatment (Figure 3c). However, 2 weeks after the acute valproate treatment was withdrawal from VTAVgat-CASP3 mice, their hyperactivity in the open field had returned (Figure 3c). Similarly, during the tail suspension test, valproate treatment did not affect VTAVgat-mCherry control mice (Figure 3d), but significantly increased the immobility time of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice back up to control levels (Figure 3e). Two weeks after valproate had been removed, however, the abnormally high agitation of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice had re-emerged (Figure 3e).

Figure 3. Valproic acid can successfully treat the mania-like behavior of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice.

Figure 3

(a) Pharmacological treatment protocol for valproic acid. The top arrows indicate vehicle or valproic acid injection (depending on mouse group) and the stars indicate when the behavioral experiments were undertaken.

(b) Locomotion speed and distance travelled for VTAVgat-mCherry mice (n=6 mice) that received either vehicle or valproic acid treatment. Paired t-test, t(5)=-0.36, p=0.73.

(c) Locomotion speed and distance travelled for VTAVgat-CASP3 mice (n=6 mice) received either vehicle or valproic acid treatment, or where the valproic acid treatment had been removed for 2 weeks. Repeated measures one-way ANOVA and Bonferroni-Holm post hoc test. F(2,10)=47; vehicle vs. valproate t(10)=8.68, ****p=0.000005; valproate vs. 2 weeks after valproate withdrawal t(10)=8.19, ****p=0.000009; vehicle vs. after valproate withdrawal t(10)=0.48, p=0.63.

(d) Time spent immobile on the TST of VTAVgat-mCherry mice (n=6 mice) received vehicle or valproate injection. Paired t-test, t(5)=0.71, p=0.5.

(e) Time spent immobile on the TST of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice (n=6 mice) received vehicle, valproate injection, or 2 weeks after valproate withdrawal. Repeated measures one-way ANOVA and Bonferroni-Holm post hoc test. F(2,10)=32; vehicle vs. valproate t(10)=7.41, ****p=0.00002; 2 weeks after valproate withdrawal; t(10)=6.32, ****p=0.00008; vehicle vs. remove t(10)=1.08, p=0.3.

(f) Percentage and time of wake and NREM for VTAVgat-mCherry mice and VTAVgat-CASP3 mice over the 12 hours “lights off” period that received saline or valproate injection. mCherry + vehicle n=6 mice; mCherry + valproate n=5 mice; CASP3 + vehicle n=6 mice; CASP3 + valproate n=7 mice. Two-way ANOVA and Bonferroni-Holm post hoc test. Wake: F(mCherry or CASP3)=66; F(Vehicle or valproate)=17; F(interaction)=21; mCherry + vehicle vs. mCherry + valproate t(9)=0.38, p=0.38; CASP3 + vehicle vs. CASP3 + valproate t(11)=6.89, ****p=0.00002. NREM: F(mCherry or CASP3)=65; F(Vehicle or valproate)=32; F(interaction)=20; mCherry + vehicle vs. mCherry + valproate t(9)=-0.92, p=0.37; CASP3 + vehicle vs. CASP3 + valproate t(11)=-6.85, ****p=0.00002.All error bars represent the SEM.

We assessed if valproate could reduce the sustained wakefulness of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice. The wake time of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice significantly decreased after treatment with valproate, whereas NREM sleep time substantially increased (Figure 3f). VTAVgat-CASP3 mice also have a pathological sleep architecture with fewer episodes of wake and NREM sleep, prolonged duration of each wake episode, and substantially decreased numbers of wake-NREM transitions28. Valproate treatment normalized the sleep-wake architecture of the VTAVgat-CASP3 mice: the episode number (Supplementary Figure 4a), episode duration of wake was restored to control levels (Supplementary Figure 4b), as were the number of transitions between wake and NREM sleep (Supplementary Figure 4c).

We next tested if a low dose of the GABAA receptor positive allosteric modulator diazepam, an anxiolytic, influenced the behavior of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice (Supplementary Figure 5a-j). Treatment of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice with either single or repeated doses of 1 mg/kg diazepam partially reduced the hyperlocomotion (Supplementary Figure 5c, h) and fully recovered the immobility time during the TST (Supplementary Figure 5e, j). These results suggest that diazepam has a potential treatment effect on VTAVgat-CASP3 mice.

We also treated VTAVgat-CASP3 mice with another anti-epilepsy and bipolar disorder drug – lamotrigine (Supplementary Figure 6a-j). Lamotrigine (10 mg/kg) decreased the locomotion (Supplementary Figure 6b, g) and immobility time during the TST (Supplementary Figure 6d, i) of VTAVgat-mCherry mice. However, lamotrigine had no effect on treatment of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice. Neither locomotion (Supplementary Figure 6c, h) nor immobility time during TST (Supplementary Figure 6e, j) were affected.

Note: with the exception of chronic lithium treatment, none of these drug treatments affected the overall body weight of the mice during and after treatments (Supplementary Figure 7a-d); body weight was reduced during chronic lithium treatment (Supplementary Figure 7c).

The extended wakefulness produced by activating VTAVglut2 neurons is not mania-like

Activating VTAVglut2 neurons also promotes wakefulness28. To investigate if this type of artificially-induced wake is also mania-like, we expressed the excitatory chemogenetic hM3Dq receptor in VTAVglut2 neurons (VTAVglut2-hM3Dq mice; Figure 4a)8. We prepared acute brain slices containing the VTA from VTAVglut2-hM3Dq mice, and first confirmed that CNO application triggered action potentials in hM3Dq-mCherry-expressing cells in VTA glutamatergic neurons (Figure 4b). Chemogenetic activation of VTAVglut2 neurons by CNO injection did not alter the locomotor activity or distance travelled of VTAVglut2-hM3Dq mice compared with saline injected mice (Figure 4c) (see also data in ref.28). Moreover, the immobility time during the TST and FST did not differ between CNO injected- and saline injected VTAVglut2-hM3Dq mice (Figure 4d, e). This data serves as an internal negative control, showing that not all artificially induced wakefulness in mice will be mania-like: the activation of VTAVglut2 neurons did not produce hyperactivity and mood-related deficits, suggesting a different kind of wakefulness from that generated by inhibition of VTAVgat neurons.

Figure 4. Activation of VTAVglut2 neurons does not produce mania-like behaviors.

Figure 4

(a) Generation of VTAVglut2-hM3Dq mice. Staining by immunohistochemistry (mCherry) for hM3Dq-mCherry expression in the VTA. Scale bar: 150 μm.

(b) Example of a spontaneously active VTA glutamatergic neuron with action potential firing before, during and after CNO application in an acute brain slice prepared from a VTAVglut2-hM3Dq mouse. The bar graph shows the average normalized frequency of action potentials of all cells recorded. One-way repeated ANOVA and Bonferroni-Holm post hoc test. F(baseline CNO washout)=35, baseline vs. CNO t(22)=7.64, ****p=1E-7, CNO vs. washout t(22)=6.91, ****p=6E-7, baseline vs. washout t(22)=0.72, p=0.4.

(c) Video-tracked paths, locomotion speed and distance travelled of VTAVglut2-hM3Dq mice (n=8 mice) following CNO (1 mg/kg) injection compared with saline injection in the open field arena over a 30-minute period. Paired t-test, t(7)=-0.72, p=0.49.

(d) Immobility time during the tail suspension test (TST) of VTAVglut2-hM3Dq mice (n=8 mice) after saline or CNO injection. Paired t-test, t(7)=-0.73, p=0.88

(e) Immobility time during the forced swimming test (FST) of VTAVglut2-hM3Dq mice (n=6 mice) after saline or CNO injection. Paired t-test, t(4)=-0.01, p=0.98.

VTA GABAergic neurons contribute to mania-like behaviors via dopamine signaling and projections to the LH

To examine whether the hyperactive behaviors in the CNO-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di mice or VTAVgat-CASP3 mice were produced by increased dopamine signaling, we gave a dopamine receptor antagonist mixture i.p. (containing SCH-23390 and raclopride for D1 and D2/D3 receptors, respectively) (these antagonists were given prior to saline or CNO injection to VTAVgat-hM4Di mice). In the open-field test, the dopamine antagonists reduced the hyperlocomotion and distance travelled of saline-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di and VTAVgat-mCherry control mice (Figure 5a, b), and also largely reduced the hyperlocomotion of CNO-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di mice (Figure 5a), but only had a partial effect on VTAVgat-CASP3 mice (Figure 5b). In the TST, dopamine receptor antagonists increased the immobility time of both saline- or CNO-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di mice and VTAVgat-mCherry control or VTAVgat-CASP3 mice (Figure 5c, d). However, the immobility time of CNO-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di mice or VTAVgat-CASP3 mice that received dopamine receptor antagonist injection was still significantly lower than saline-injected VTAVgat-hM4Di mice or VTAVgat-mCherry mice injected with dopamine receptor antagonists (Figure 5c, d). We also found that the extended wakefulness of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice was substantially attenuated by the dopamine receptor antagonists (Supplementary Figure 8a-b). The above results suggest that blocking dopamine signaling substantially reduces the mania-like behaviors of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice.

Figure 5. Circuit mechanisms underlying the mania-like behaviors mediated by VTAVgat neurons.

Figure 5

(a) Locomotion speed and distance travelled of VTAVgat-hM4Di mice that received injections with vehicle or a dopamine receptor antagonist mixture (SCH-23390 and raclopride for D1 and D2/D3 receptors, respectively) and either saline (n= 7 mice) or CNO (n=7 mice). Two-way ANOVA and Bonferroni-Holm post hoc test. F(saline or CNO)=13.6; F(vehicle or antagonists)=91.2; F(interaction)=7.4; Vehicle + saline vs. antagonists + saline t(12)=5, ***p=0.0002; Vehicle + CNO vs. antagonists + CNO t(12)=8.34, ****p=2E-6. All error bars represent the SEM.

(b) Locomotion speed and distance travelled of VTAVgat-mCherry and VTAVgat-CASP3 mice that received injections with either vehicle (n=6 mice for mCherry and n=10 mice for CASP3) or a dopamine receptor antagonist mixture (n=6 mice for mCherry and n=13 mice for CASP3). Two-way ANOVA and Bonferroni-Holm post hoc test. F(mCherry or CASP3)=10.8; F(saline or antagonists)=4.5; F(interaction)=0.03; mCherry + vehicle vs. mCherry + antagonists t(10)=4.14, **p=0.002; CASP3 + vehicle vs. CASP3 + antagonists t(21)=1.64, p=0.11. All error bars represent the SEM.

(c) Time spent immobile for the tail suspension assay of VTAVgat-hM4Di mice that received injections of either vehicle or the dopamine receptor antagonist mixture and saline or CNO. Two-way ANOVA and Bonferroni-Holm post hoc test. F(saline or CNO)=36; F(Vehicle or antagonists)=27; F(interaction)=0.35; vehicle + saline vs. antagonists + saline t(12)=-7.59, ****p=6E-6; vehicle + CNO vs. antagonists + CNO t(12)=-2.54, *p=0.02; antagonists + saline vs. antagonists + CNO t(12)=3.8, **p=0.002. All error bars represent the SEM.

(d) Time spent immobile for the tail suspension assay of VTAVgat-mCherry and VTAVgat-CASP3 mice that received injections of either vehicle (n=8 mice for mCherry and n=9 mice for CASP3) or the dopamine receptor antagonist mixture (n=8 mice for mCherry and n=9 mice for CASP3). Two-way ANOVA and Bonferroni-Holm post hoc test. F(mCherry or CASP3)=209; F(saline or antagonists)=25; F(interaction)=4.38; mCherry + vehicle vs. mCherry + antagonists t(14)=-4.87, ***p=0.0002; CASP3 + vehicle vs. CASP3 + antagonists t(16)=-2.16, *p=0.04; mCherry + antagonists vs. CASP3 + antagonists t(15)=13, ****p=7e-10. All error bars represent the SEM.

(e) AAV-DIO-NpHR-mCherry was injected the VTA of Vgat-ires-cre mice, and optic fibers were bilaterally implanted above the LH. The NpHR-mCherry fibers projecting from the VTAVgat neurons into the LH were stained by immunohistochemistry (mCherry, red). Scale bar: 200 μm.

(f) Video-tracked paths and distance travelled in the open field by VTAVgat-NpHR mice (n=7 mice) with and without opto-inhibition of VTAVgat terminals in the LH over 5 minute period. Paired t-test, t(6)=-4.08, **p=0.006.

(g) Time spent immobile on the tail suspension test (TST) of VTAVgat-NpHR mice (n=7 mice) with and without opto-inhibition of VTAVgat terminals in the LH. Paired t-test, t(6)=5.3, **p=0.001.

(h) Time spent immobile on the forced swimming test (FST) of VTAVgat-NpHR mice (n=6 mice) with and without opto-inhibition of VTAVgat terminals in the LH. Paired t-test, t(5)=6.77, **p=0.001.

(i) Video-tracked paths and distance travelled in the open field by VTAVgat-ChR2 mice (n=8 mice) with and without opto-activation of VTAVgat terminals in the LH over 5-minute period. Paired t-test, t(7)=0.18, p=0.85.

(j) Time spent immobile on the tail suspension test (TST) of VTAVgat-ChR2 mice (n=8 mice) with and without opto-activation of VTAVgat terminals in the LH. Paired t-test, t(7)=-3.11, *p=0.01.

(k) Time spent immobile on the forced swimming test (FST) of VTAVgat-ChR2 mice (n=6 mice) with and without opto-activation of VTAVgat terminals in the LH. Paired t-test, t(5)=-4, *p=0.01.

(l) Conceptual circuit diagram illustrating VTAVgat neurons inhibiting VTA dopamine (DA) neurons and circuitry in the LH. When the VTAVgat cells have acutely diminished or absent function, activity of VTA dopamine neurons and arousal-promoting neurons in the LH increase. Valproate can reverse the effects of these changes.

VTAVgat neurons project prominently to the LH28. We conducted optogenetic and chemogenetic experiments to examine if the VTAVgat to LH projection contributes to hyperactivity and mood-related behaviors. An AAV carrying a Cre-dependent eNpHR3.0-mCherry transgene was injected into the VTA of Vgat-ires-cre mice to express inhibitory halorhodopsin in VTAVgat neurons to generate VTAVgat-NpHR mice (Figure 5e). Optic fibers were placed above the LH of VTAVgat-NpHR mice, where dense NpHR-mCherry projections arising from the VTAVgat cell bodies can be seen (Figure 5e). Optogenetic inhibition of the VTAVgat to LH projection, by activating NpHR-mCherry in the LH, elevated the locomotion of mice in the open field (Figure 5f), whereas it decreased the immobility times during the TST (Figure 5g) and FST (Figure 5h). We confirmed this using specific chemogenetic inhibition of the VTAVgat to LH projection. CNO was infused directly into the LH of VTAVgat-hM4Di mice, which expressed the inhibitory CNO receptor in VTAVgat neurons (Supplementary Figure 9a). CNO infusion increased locomotion speed (Supplementary Figure 9b), and decreased immobility time during the TST (Supplementary Figure 9c). These results indicate that inhibiting GABAergic tone from VTAVgat neurons to the LH produces hyperlocomotion and less depressive-like behaviors. We next injected AAV-DIO-ChR2-mCherry into the VTA of Vgat-cre mice to express excitatory channel rhodopsins in VTA GABAergic cells. Although opto-activation of the VTAVgat to LH projection did not affect the locomotion of mice in the open field (Figure 5i), it did increase the immobility times during the TST (Figure 5j) and FST (Figure 5k). The above results suggest that the VTAVgat to LH projection, together with VTAVgat local inhibition of the dopamine system, contributes to generating mania-like behaviors.

Discussion

We found that endophenotypes (hyperactivity, elevated mood and reduced sleep) resembling aspects of mania could be produced by lesion or acute inhibition of GABAergic VTAVgat neurons. In mice with lesioned or inhibited VTAVgat neurons, D-amphetamine further increased the hyperactivity, suggesting the mania-like behavior of these mice could be the type associated with bipolar disorder in humans. The mania effects were partially blocked by D1, D2 and D3 receptor antagonists. Thus, hyperdopaminergia could originate from VTAVgat cells failing to inhibit dopamine neurons (Figure 5l). VTAVgat cells, however, are not simply VTA inhibitory interneurons that reduce dopamine’s actions. Part of their actions in promoting increased movement in the FST and TST depends on their inhibitory projections to the LH. Our results on hyperactivity produced by disinhibiting LH circuits are consistent with previous findings. In rats, repeated delivery of subthreshold stimuli (kindling) to the LH induces mania-like behavior49. Indeed, the LH promotes physical activity and motivated behavior50; LH lesions in rodents and people produce a state of wakefulness with no motion51. The LH contains orexin/glutamate neurons that promote arousal, motivation and energy expenditure52, and GABAergic neurons whose activation induces wakefulness and locomotion50, 53, 54. It is likely that the VTAVgat neurons inhibit both the orexin neurons and/or the arousal/locomotor-promoting GABA neurons in the LH28, 36.

Given the hub-like nature of the GABAergic VTAVgat neurons, the mania phenotype produced by lesioning or inhibiting these neurons is likely a consequence of the disinhibition of multiple targets, e.g. dopamine cells in the VTA, but also to some extent other cell types in the LH. On the other hand, VTAVgat neurons also locally inhibit VTA glutamate neurons28, but disinhibition of glutamate neurons in the VTA by lesioning or inhibiting the VTAVgat neurons probably does not contribute to the mania-phenotype. Direct pharmacogenetic excitation of these glutamate cells produces calm wakefulness (Figure 4)28.

Inability to sleep is one of the diagnostic criteria for the mania phase of bipolar disorder2, 3, 55, and certainly VTAVgat mice sleep consistently less than control mice, such that they have 100% wakefulness during the “lights off” phase compared with control mice that take about 4 hours NREM sleep during this time28. Usually, the longer that wakefulness persists, the stronger the urge to sleep becomes, until sleep is inescapable. A remarkable finding is that VTAVgat-CASP3 mice bypassed the homeostatic process of having NREM recovery sleep after sleep deprivation – they did not catch up on lost sleep in spite of already starting from a strongly sleep-deprived background. The mechanisms underlying sleep homeostasis are not well understood48, 56, 57. Sleep homeostasis is thought to reflect the function of sleep, (otherwise why catch up on lost sleep?), and it will be interesting to investigate if the chronic lack of sleep of VTAVgat-CASP mice will be detrimental metabolically.

Sleep deprivation can sometimes trigger mania episodes in humans3, 55, 58. Consequently, an interesting question is whether the chronic sleep deprivation phenotype of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice actually causes their mania-like symptoms. Mice chronically sleep derived with the flower pot method - the animals stay on top of a raised platform surrounded by water, and when they fall asleep, they fall into water and wake up - also develop mania-like behavior59. This type of sleep deprivation is, however, likely to be stressful. In the VTAVgat-CASP3 mice, the sleep-deprivation phenotype is internally generated within the brain, and could be less stressful per se.

The mania-like behaviors of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice, including the strong sleep loss and abnormal sleep architecture, were reversed by valproate, and re-emerged when valproate treatment was stopped. Valproate has diverse actions: for example, it enhances GABAergic transmission and reduces action potential firing (reviewed in ref 13), but by inhibiting histone deacetylases60, 61, valproate treatments also change the expression of many genes. We found that low doses of diazepam were also efficacious in reducing the hyperarousal of VTAVgat-CASP3 mice. Diazepam a GABAA receptor positive allosteric modulator, enhances GABA transmission62. At the low doses tested here in mice, diazepam is an anxiolytic, but at higher doses (which we did not test) it induces sleep62. Two other important drugs used for treating bipolar disorder, lithium and lamotrigine, had no effect in treating VTAVgat-CASP3 mice. Although its mechanism of action is unclear, lithium treatment is the first choice to treat mania episodes, although a subset of bipolar patients with rapidly cycling mania and depression phases are resistant to lithium (reviewed in ref 13). In most mouse models of mania, both valproate and lithium are usually effective treatments (reviewed in ref. 1). But similar to our results, mice with SHANK3 overexpression in the neocortex, hippocampus and basal ganglia, have mania-like symptoms treatable with valproate but not lithium13. Similar arguments could apply to lamotrigine. It could be that the VTAVgat-CASP3 mice and SHANK3-overexpressing mice models reflect a specific mania type.

In summary, the model based on reducing VTAVgat neuronal function could provide further insight into the genesis of some types of mania-like behaviors. One hypothesis is that VTAVgat neurons help set the level of mental and physical activity.Physiologically, inputs that inhibit VTAVgat neurons will transiently intensify aspects of wakefulness useful for acute success or survival: increased activity, enhanced alertness and motivation, reduced sleep (Figure 5l). Taken to the extreme, however, pathology could emerge and decreased or failed inhibition from VTAVgat neurons will produce mania-like qualities (Figure 5l).

Supplementary Material

Supp. Material.Supp text plus supp. figures

Acknowledgements

Our work was supported by the Wellcome Trust (107839/Z/15/Z, N.P.F. and 107841/Z/15/Z, W.W); the UK Dementia Research Institute (W.W. and N.P.F.); the Funds for International Cooperation and Exchange of the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 81620108012 and 81901080 H.D. and N.P.F.); the China Scholarship Council (Y.M.); the research programme Rubicon (019.161LW.010) financed by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) (W.B.); and the People Programme (Marie Curie Actions) of the European Union’s Eight Framework Programme H2020 under REA grant agreement 753548 (W.B.)

Footnotes

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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