The Nordman Lab

at Southern Illinois University School of Medicine

Orbitofrontal cortical dysfunction in stress-induced aggression


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An orbitofrontal-amygdala circuit in traumatic stress-induced aggression
The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) is widely viewed as a center for behavioral control, helping regulate emotions and suppress inappropriate actions. This has led to the idea that it acts as a cortical “brake” on aggression. 
Here we test a different possibility: that the OFC can actively promote aggression under certain conditions. 
We focus on a direct pathway from the medial OFC to the medial amygdala, a key node in aggression circuits. Using circuit-specific tracing, in vivo calcium imaging, and chemogenetic manipulation, we find that this pathway is excitatory, strongly activated during traumatic stress, and required for the later emergence of aggressive behavior. 
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Mapping of excitatory medial orbitofrontal inputs to the medial amygdala
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Traumatic stress activates OFC-MeA neurons
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Inhibition of OFC-MeA neurons inhibits traumatic stress-induced aggression
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Traumatic stress recruits an excitatory orbitofrontal–amygdala pathway to drive maladaptive aggression.


Mikaela L. Aholt, Jessica T. Jacobs, Magdalene P. Adjei, Nooshin Mojahed, Elana Qasem, Sandria W. Athul, Buffy Ellsworth, Jacob C. Nordman

Neuropsychopharmacology