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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin B. Land is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin B. Land.


Nature Neuroscience | 2014

Medial prefrontal D1 dopamine neurons control food intake

Benjamin B. Land; Nandakumar S. Narayanan; Rong-Jian Liu; Carol Gianessi; Catherine E. Brayton; David M Grimaldi; Maysa Sarhan; Douglas J. Guarnieri; Karl Deisseroth; George K. Aghajanian; Ralph J. DiLeone

Although the prefrontal cortex influences motivated behavior, its role in food intake remains unclear. Here, we demonstrate a role for D1-type dopamine receptor–expressing neurons in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) in the regulation of feeding. Food intake increases activity in D1 neurons of the mPFC in mice, and optogenetic photostimulation of D1 neurons increases feeding. Conversely, inhibition of D1 neurons decreases intake. Stimulation-based mapping of prefrontal D1 neuron projections implicates the medial basolateral amygdala (mBLA) as a downstream target of these afferents. mBLA neurons activated by prefrontal D1 stimulation are CaMKII positive and closely juxtaposed to prefrontal D1 axon terminals. Finally, photostimulating these axons in the mBLA is sufficient to increase feeding, recapitulating the effects of mPFC D1 stimulation. These data describe a new circuit for top-down control of food intake.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Prefrontal D1 dopamine signaling is required for temporal control

Nandakumar S. Narayanan; Benjamin B. Land; John E. Solder; Karl Deisseroth; Ralph J. DiLeone

Temporal control, or how organisms guide movements in time to achieve behavioral goals, depends on dopamine signaling. The medial prefrontal cortex controls many goal-directed behaviors and receives dopaminergic input primarily from the midbrain ventral tegmental area. However, this system has never been linked with temporal control. Here, we test the hypothesis that dopaminergic projections from the ventral tegmental area to the prefrontal cortex influence temporal control. Rodents were trained to perform a fixed-interval timing task with an interval of 20 s. We report several results: first, that decreasing dopaminergic neurotransmission using virally mediated RNA interference of tyrosine hydroxylase impaired temporal control, and second that pharmacological disruption of prefrontal D1 dopamine receptors, but not D2 dopamine receptors, impaired temporal control. We then used optogenetics to specifically and selectively manipulate prefrontal neurons expressing D1 dopamine receptors during fixed-interval timing performance. Selective inhibition of D1-expressing prefrontal neurons impaired fixed-interval timing, whereas stimulation made animals more efficient during task performance. These data provide evidence that ventral tegmental dopaminergic projections to the prefrontal cortex influence temporal control via D1 receptors. The results identify a critical circuit for temporal control of behavior that could serve as a target for the treatment of dopaminergic diseases.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Optogenetic stimulation of infralimbic PFC reproduces ketamine’s rapid and sustained antidepressant actions

Manabu Fuchikami; Alexandra Thomas; Rong-Jian Liu; Eric S. Wohleb; Benjamin B. Land; Ralph J. DiLeone; George K. Aghajanian; Ronald S. Duman

Significance Clinical studies report that a single, low dose of ketamine produces a rapid antidepressant response in treatment-resistant depressed patients. Although rodent studies have begun to elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying the behavioral actions of ketamine, the brain regions and cellular mechanisms have not been defined. Using a combination of pharmacological silencing and optogenetic stimulation approaches, the results of the current study demonstrate that ketamine infusion or optogenetic stimulation of the infalimbic prefrontal cortex produces antidepressant behavioral and synaptic responses similar to the actions of systemic ketamine. These findings further elucidate the mechanisms underlying the therapeutic actions of ketamine and will enhance the development of safer rapid-acting and efficacious agents. Ketamine produces rapid and sustained antidepressant actions in depressed patients, but the precise cellular mechanisms underlying these effects have not been identified. Here we determined if modulation of neuronal activity in the infralimbic prefrontal cortex (IL-PFC) underlies the antidepressant and anxiolytic actions of ketamine. We found that neuronal inactivation of the IL-PFC completely blocked the antidepressant and anxiolytic effects of systemic ketamine in rodent models and that ketamine microinfusion into IL-PFC reproduced these behavioral actions of systemic ketamine. We also found that optogenetic stimulation of the IL-PFC produced rapid and long-lasting antidepressant and anxiolytic effects and that these effects are associated with increased number and function of spine synapses of layer V pyramidal neurons. The results demonstrate that ketamine infusions or optogenetic stimulation of IL-PFC are sufficient to produce long-lasting antidepressant behavioral and synaptic responses similar to the effects of systemic ketamine administration.


eLife | 2016

Appetite controlled by a cholecystokinin nucleus of the solitary tract to hypothalamus neurocircuit

Giuseppe D'Agostino; David J. Lyons; Claudia Cristiano; Luke K. Burke; Joseph C. Madara; John N. Campbell; Ana Paula Garcia; Benjamin B. Land; Bradford B. Lowell; Ralph J. DiLeone; Lora K. Heisler

The nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) is a key gateway for meal-related signals entering the brain from the periphery. However, the chemical mediators crucial to this process have not been fully elucidated. We reveal that a subset of NTS neurons containing cholecystokinin (CCKNTS) is responsive to nutritional state and that their activation reduces appetite and body weight in mice. Cell-specific anterograde tracing revealed that CCKNTS neurons provide a distinctive innervation of the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVH), with fibers and varicosities in close apposition to a subset of melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4RPVH) cells, which are also responsive to CCK. Optogenetic activation of CCKNTS axon terminals within the PVH reveal the satiating function of CCKNTS neurons to be mediated by a CCKNTS→PVH pathway that also encodes positive valence. These data identify the functional significance of CCKNTS neurons and reveal a sufficient and discrete NTS to hypothalamus circuit controlling appetite. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.12225.001


Biological Psychiatry | 2015

Neuropeptide Y Activity in the Nucleus Accumbens Modulates Feeding Behavior and Neuronal Activity

José K. van den Heuvel; Kara Furman; Myrtille C.R. Gumbs; Leslie Eggels; Darren M. Opland; Benjamin B. Land; Sharon M. Kolk; Nandakumar S. Narayanan; Eric Fliers; Andries Kalsbeek; Ralph J. DiLeone; Susanne E. la Fleur

BACKGROUND Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a hypothalamic neuropeptide that plays a prominent role in feeding and energy homeostasis. Expression of the NPY Y1 receptor (Y1R) is highly concentrated in the nucleus accumbens (Acb), a region important in the regulation of palatable feeding. In this study, we performed a number of experiments to investigate the actions of NPY in the Acb. METHODS First, we determined caloric intake and food choice after bilateral administration of NPY in the Acb in rats on a free-choice diet of saturated fat, 30% sucrose solution, and standard chow and whether this was mediated by the Y1R. Second, we measured the effect of intra-Acb NPY on neuronal activity using in vivo electrophysiology. Third, we examined co-localization of Y1R with enkephalin and dynorphin neurons and the effect of NPY on preproenkephalin messenger RNA levels in the striatum using fluorescent and radioactive in situ hybridization. Finally, using retrograde tracing, we examined whether NPY neurons in the arcuate nucleus projected to the Acb. RESULTS In rats on the free-choice, high-fat, high-sugar diet, intra-Acb NPY increased intake of fat, but not sugar or chow, and this was mediated by the Y1R. Intra-Acb NPY reduced neuronal firing, as well as preproenkephalin messenger RNA expression in the striatum. Moreover, Acb enkephalin neurons expressed Y1R and arcuate nucleus NPY neurons projected to the Acb. CONCLUSIONS NPY reduces neuronal firing in the Acb resulting in increased palatable food intake. Together, our neuroanatomical, pharmacologic, and neuronal activity data support a role and mechanism for intra-Acb NPY-induced fat intake.


Biological Psychiatry | 2013

Flavor-independent maintenance, extinction, and reinstatement of fat self-administration in mice.

Luis A. Tellez; Jozélia G. Ferreira; Sara Medina; Benjamin B. Land; Ralph J. DiLeone; Ivan E. de Araujo

BACKGROUND Mounting evidence suggests that overeating may be conceptualized within the same behavioral and neurobiological framework as drug addiction. One potentially important difference between overeating versus drug abuse refers to the sensory stimulation of oral receptors by palatable foods, a feature that may be required for reinforcement during intake. Likewise, postingestive effects and caloric content of food also contribute to reinforcing behavior and might influence the development of compulsive eating behavior. The purpose of the current study was to establish whether intragastric self-administration of fat emulsions, that is, bypassing the oral cavity, recapitulates some of the behavioral and neurobiological hallmarks of psychostimulant self-administration. METHODS We used behavioral assays in mice to assess acquisition, maintenance, extinction, and reinstatement of intragastric self-administration of lipid emulsions to determine the extent to which postoral fat self-administration recapitulates psychostimulant self-administration. Striatal dopamine efflux during behavioral tasks was determined by brain microdialysis coupled to chromatographic-electrochemical analyses. RESULTS We show that in direct analogy to drug self-administration, 1) decreases in fat dose concentration were met with compensatory increases in response rates aimed at maintaining constant hourly caloric intake; 2) rates of responding markedly increased during both extinction and progressive ratio schedules of reinforcement; and 3) elevations in striatal dopamine levels observed during maintenance were markedly attenuated during extinction sessions, only to be restored on reinstatement. CONCLUSIONS Our data thus support the contention that stimulation of oral receptors by caloric foods may not be required for the expression of certain addiction-related neurobehavioral markers.


Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience | 2014

Optogenetic inhibition of neurons by internal light production

Benjamin B. Land; Catherine E. Brayton; Kara Furman; Zoe LaPalombara; Ralph J. DiLeone

Optogenetics is an extremely powerful tool for selective neuronal activation/inhibition and dissection of neural circuits. However, a limitation of in vivo optogenetics is that an animal must be tethered to an optical fiber for delivery of light. Here, we describe a new method for in vivo, optogenetic inhibition of neural activity using an internal, animal-generated light source based on firefly luciferase. Two adeno-associated viruses encoding luciferase were tested and both produced concentration-dependent light after administration of the substrate, luciferin. Mice were co-infected with halorhodopsin- and luciferase-expressing viruses in the striatum, and luciferin administration significantly reduced Fos activity compared to control animals infected with halorhodopsin only. Recordings of neuronal activity in behaving animals confirmed that firing was greatly reduced after luciferin administration. Finally, amphetamine-induced locomotor activity was reduced in halorhodopsin/luciferase mice pre-injected with luciferin compared to controls. This demonstrates that virally encoded luciferase is able to generate sufficient light to activate halorhodopsin and suppress neural activity and change behavior. This approach could be used to generate inhibition in response to activation of specific molecular pathways.


eneuro | 2016

Vitamin D3: a role in dopamine circuit regulation, diet-induced obesity, and drug consumption

Joseph R. Trinko; Benjamin B. Land; Wojciech Solecki; Robert J. Wickham; Luis A. Tellez; Jaime Maldonado-Aviles; Ivan E. de Araujo; Nii A. Addy; Ralph J. DiLeone

Abstract The influence of micronutrients on dopamine systems is not well defined. Using mice, we show a potential role for reduced dietary vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) in promoting diet-induced obesity (DIO), food intake, and drug consumption while on a high fat diet. To complement these deficiency studies, treatments with exogenous fully active vitamin D3 (calcitriol, 10 µg/kg, i.p.) were performed. Nondeficient mice that were made leptin resistant with a high fat diet displayed reduced food intake and body weight after an acute treatment with exogenous calcitriol. Dopamine neurons in the midbrain and their target neurons in the striatum were found to express vitamin D3 receptor protein. Acute calcitriol treatment led to transcriptional changes of dopamine-related genes in these regions in naive mice, enhanced amphetamine-induced dopamine release in both naive mice and rats, and increased locomotor activity after acute amphetamine treatment (2.5 mg/kg, i.p.). Alternatively, mice that were chronically fed either the reduced D3 high fat or chow diets displayed less activity after acute amphetamine treatment compared with their respective controls. Finally, high fat deficient mice that were trained to orally consume liquid amphetamine (90 mg/L) displayed increased consumption, while nondeficient mice treated with calcitriol showed reduced consumption. Our findings suggest that reduced dietary D3 may be a contributing environmental factor enhancing DIO as well as drug intake while eating a high fat diet. Moreover, these data demonstrate that dopamine circuits are modulated by D3 signaling, and may serve as direct or indirect targets for exogenous calcitriol.


Archive | 2016

Vitamin D3: A Role in Dopamine Circuit Regulation, Diet-Induced Obesity, and Drug

Joseph R. Trinko; Benjamin B. Land; Wojciech Solecki; Robert J. Wickham; Luis A. Tellez; Jaime Maldonado-Aviles; Ivan E. de Araujo; Nii A. Addy; Ralph J. DiLeone


Behavioural Pharmacology | 2013

S.11.2 - PREFRONTAL D1 NEURONS AND REGULATION OF FOOD INTAKE

Benjamin B. Land; Nandakumar S. Narayanan; Rong-Jian Liu; Carol Gianessi; Catherine E. Brayton; David M Grimaldi; Maysa Sarhan; Douglas J. Guarnieri; Deisseroth Karl; George K. Aghajanian; Ralph J. DiLeone

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Nandakumar S. Narayanan

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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