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An Island of Reil excitation: Mapping glutamatergic (vGlut1+ and vGlut2+) connections in the medial insular cortex

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posted on 2025-05-09, 04:44 authored by Mia Jessica O'Shea, Roberta Goncalves Anversa, Sarah Sulaiman Ch'ng, Erin CampbellErin Campbell, Leigh Clasina Walker, Zane Bruce Andrews, Andrew John Lawrence, Robyn Mary Brown
The insular cortex is a multifunctional and richly connected region of the cerebral cortex, critical in the neural integration of external stimuli and internal signals. Well-served for this role by a large network of afferent and efferent connections, the mouse insula can be simplified into an anterior, medial and posterior portion. Here we focus on the medial subregion, a once over-looked area that has gained recent attention for its involvement in an array of behaviours. Although the connections of medial insular cortex neurons have been previously identified, their precise glutamatergic phenotype remains undefined (typically defined by the presence of the subtype of vesicular glutamate transporters). Hence, we combined Cre knock-in mouse lines and adeno-associated viral tracing to distinguish between the expression of the two major vesicular glutamate transporters, type 1 (vGlut1) and 2 (vGlut2), in the subregion's neuronal inputs and outputs. Our results determined that the medial insula has extensive glutamatergic efferents expressing both vGlut1 and vGlut2 throughout the neuraxis. In contrast, a more conservative number of glutamatergic inputs were observed, with exclusively vGlut2+ projections received from hypothalamic and thalamic regions. Taken together, we demonstrate that vGlut1- and vGlut2-expressing networks of this insular subdivision have distinct connectivity patterns, including a greater abundance of vGlut1+ fibres innervating hypothalamic regions and the extended amygdala. These findings provide insight into the distinct chemo-architecture of this region, which may facilitate further investigation into the role of the medial insula in complex behaviour.

History

Journal title

Biochemical Pharmacology

Volume

230

Issue

Part 2

Article number

116637

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing

School

School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy

Rights statement

© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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