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Dive into the research topics where Jenna A. McHenry is active.

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Featured researches published by Jenna A. McHenry.


Frontiers in Neuroendocrinology | 2014

Sex differences in anxiety and depression: role of testosterone.

Jenna A. McHenry; Nicole Carrier; Elaine M. Hull; Mohamed Kabbaj

Compelling evidence exists for pervasive sex differences in pathological conditions, including anxiety and depressive disorders, with females more than twice as likely to be afflicted. Gonadal hormones may be a major factor in this disparity, given that women are more likely to experience mood disturbances during times of hormonal flux, and testosterone may have protective benefits against anxiety and depression. In this review we focus on the effects of testosterone in males and females, revealed in both human and animal studies. We also present possible neurobiological mechanisms underlying testosterones mostly protective benefits, including the brain regions, neural circuits, and cellular and molecular pathways involved. While the precise underlying mechanisms remain unclear, both activational and organizational effects of testosterone appear to contribute to these effects. Future clinical studies are necessary in order to better understand when and how testosterone therapy may be effective in both sexes.


Nature | 2017

Prefrontal cortex output circuits guide reward seeking through divergent cue encoding

James M. Otis; Vijay Mohan K. Namboodiri; Ana M. Matan; Elisa S. Voets; Emily P. Mohorn; Oksana Kosyk; Jenna A. McHenry; J. Elliott Robinson; Shanna L Resendez; Mark A. Rossi; Garret D. Stuber

The prefrontal cortex is a critical neuroanatomical hub for controlling motivated behaviours across mammalian species. In addition to intra-cortical connectivity, prefrontal projection neurons innervate subcortical structures that contribute to reward-seeking behaviours, such as the ventral striatum and midline thalamus. While connectivity among these structures contributes to appetitive behaviours, how projection-specific prefrontal neurons encode reward-relevant information to guide reward seeking is unknown. Here we use in vivo two-photon calcium imaging to monitor the activity of dorsomedial prefrontal neurons in mice during an appetitive Pavlovian conditioning task. At the population level, these neurons display diverse activity patterns during the presentation of reward-predictive cues. However, recordings from prefrontal neurons with resolved projection targets reveal that individual corticostriatal neurons show response tuning to reward-predictive cues, such that excitatory cue responses are amplified across learning. By contrast, corticothalamic neurons gradually develop new, primarily inhibitory responses to reward-predictive cues across learning. Furthermore, bidirectional optogenetic manipulation of these neurons reveals that stimulation of corticostriatal neurons promotes conditioned reward-seeking behaviour after learning, while activity in corticothalamic neurons suppresses both the acquisition and expression of conditioned reward seeking. These data show how prefrontal circuitry can dynamically control reward-seeking behaviour through the opposing activities of projection-specific cell populations.


Nature Neuroscience | 2017

Hormonal gain control of a medial preoptic area social reward circuit

Jenna A. McHenry; James M. Otis; Mark A. Rossi; J. Elliott Robinson; Oksana Kosyk; Noah W Miller; Zoe A. McElligott; Evgeny A. Budygin; David R. Rubinow; Garret D. Stuber

Neural networks that control reproduction must integrate social and hormonal signals, tune motivation, and coordinate social interactions. However, the neural circuit mechanisms for these processes remain unresolved. The medial preoptic area (mPOA), an essential node for social behaviors, comprises molecularly diverse neurons with widespread projections. Here we identify a steroid-responsive subset of neurotensin (Nts)-expressing mPOA neurons that interface with the ventral tegmental area (VTA) to form a socially engaged reward circuit. Using in vivo two-photon imaging in female mice, we show that mPOANts neurons preferentially encode attractive male cues compared to nonsocial appetitive stimuli. Ovarian hormone signals regulate both the physiological and cue-encoding properties of these cells. Furthermore, optogenetic stimulation of mPOANts–VTA circuitry promotes rewarding phenotypes, social approach and striatal dopamine release. Collectively, these data demonstrate that steroid-sensitive mPOA neurons encode ethologically relevant stimuli and co-opt midbrain reward circuits to promote prosocial behaviors critical for species survival.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Physiological state gates acquisition and expression of mesolimbic reward prediction signals

Jackson J. Cone; Samantha M. Fortin; Jenna A. McHenry; Garret D. Stuber; James E. McCutcheon; Mitchell F. Roitman

Significance Associating environmental cues with their outcomes occurs through multiple strategies relying on different neural substrates. Unpredicted reward evokes dopamine release, which also develops to predictive cues, suggesting that predictive dopamine signals arise only after extensive pairings of cues with appetitive outcomes. However, recent work suggests that dopamine may also contribute to model-based learning, which does not require that cues and their appetitive outcomes be experienced in tandem. Taking advantage of the appetitive value of a hypertonic sodium solution, which radically and reversibly changes with physiological state, we show that dopamine differentially encodes hypertonic NaCl depending on sodium balance independent of prior experience. Conversely, dopamine only encoded a NaCl cue after extensive, state-dependent experience, firmly supporting dopamine’s role in experience-dependent learning. Phasic dopamine signaling participates in associative learning by reinforcing associations between outcomes (unconditioned stimulus; US) and their predictors (conditioned stimulus; CS). However, prior work has always engendered these associations with innately rewarding stimuli. Thus, whether dopamine neurons can acquire prediction signals in the absence of appetitive experience and update them when the value of the outcome changes remains unknown. Here, we used sodium depletion to reversibly manipulate the appetitive value of a hypertonic sodium solution while measuring phasic dopamine signaling in rat nucleus accumbens. Dopamine responses to the NaCl US following sodium depletion updated independent of prior experience. In contrast, prediction signals were only acquired through extensive experience with a US that had positive affective value. Once learned, dopamine prediction signals were flexibly expressed in a state-dependent manner. Our results reveal striking differences with respect to how physiological state shapes dopamine signals evoked by outcomes and their predictors.


Behavioral Neuroscience | 2012

Dopamine D1 Receptors and Phosphorylation of Dopamine- and Cyclic AMP-Regulated Phosphoprotein-32 in the Medial Preoptic Area are Involved in Experience-Induced Enhancement of Male Sexual Behavior in Rats

Jenna A. McHenry; Genevieve A. Bell; Bradley P. Parrish; Elaine M. Hull

The medial preoptic area (MPOA) is an integral site for male sexual behavior. Dopamine is released in the MPOA before and during copulation and facilitates male rat sexual behavior. Repeated sexual experience and noncopulatory exposures to an estrous female facilitate subsequent copulation. However, the neurobiological mechanisms that mediate such enhancement remain unclear. Here, we examined the role of dopamine D₁ receptors in the MPOA in experience-induced enhancement of male sexual behavior in rats. In experiment 1, microinjections of the D₁ antagonist SCH-23390 into the MPOA before each of seven daily 30-min noncopulatory exposures to a receptive female impaired copulation on a drug-free test on Day 8, compared to vehicle-treated female-exposed animals. Copulatory performance in drug-treated animals was similar to that of vehicle-treated males that had not been preexposed to females. This effect was site specific. There were no group differences in locomotor activity in an open field on the copulation test day. In experiment 2, a separate cohort of animals was used to examine phosphorylation of dopamine- and cAMP-regulated phosphoprotein (DARPP-32) in the MPOA of animals with acute and/or chronic sexual experience. DARPP-32 is a downstream marker of D₁ receptor signaling and substrate of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). Western immunoblot analysis revealed that p-DARPP-32 expression was greatest in the MPOA of males that received both acute and chronic sexual experience, compared to all other mated conditions and naïve controls. These data suggest that D₁ receptors in the MPOA contribute to experience-induced enhancement of male sexual behavior, perhaps through a PKA regulated mechanism.


Behavioral Neuroscience | 2012

AN NMDA ANTAGONIST IN THE MPOA IMPAIRS COPULATION AND STIMULUS SENSITIZATION IN MALE RATS

Anna V. Vigdorchik; Bradley P. Parrish; Gwen A. Lagoda; Jenna A. McHenry; Elaine M. Hull

Systemic injections of an NMDA antagonist have been shown to impair mating in male rats. One site where glutamate and its NMDA receptors may contribute to mating is the medial preoptic area (MPOA), which is vital for male sexual behavior. Glutamate is released in the MPOA during copulation, and especially at the time of ejaculation. We report here that the NMDA antagonist MK-801, microinjected into the MPOA, impaired copulatory behavior in sexually naïve as well as experienced males. In rats tested both as naïve and after sexual experience, drug treatment produced more profound impairment in naïve males. In addition, MK-801, microinjected into the MPOA before each of 7 noncopulatory exposures to receptive female rats, resulted in copulatory impairments on a drug-free test on Day 8, relative to aCSF-treated rats; their behavior was similar to that of males that had not been preexposed to females. Therefore, NMDA receptors in the MPOA contribute to the control of copulation and stimulus sensitization. Glutamate, acting via NMDA receptors, regulates many neural functions, including neuronal plasticity. This is the first demonstration that a similar mechanism in the MPOA sensitizes male rats to the stimuli from a receptive female, and thereby enhances their behavior.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2017

Coordination of Brain-Wide Activity Dynamics by Dopaminergic Neurons.

Heather K. Decot; Vijay Mohan K. Namboodiri; Wei Gao; Jenna A. McHenry; Joshua H. Jennings; Sung Ho Lee; Pranish A. Kantak; Yu Chieh Jill Kao; Manasmita Das; Ilana B. Witten; Karl Deisseroth; Yen Yu I Shih; Garret D. Stuber

Several neuropsychiatric conditions, such as addiction and schizophrenia, may arise in part from dysregulated activity of ventral tegmental area dopaminergic (THVTA) neurons, as well as from more global maladaptation in neurocircuit function. However, whether THVTA activity affects large-scale brain-wide function remains unknown. Here we selectively activated THVTA neurons in transgenic rats and measured resulting changes in whole-brain activity using stimulus-evoked functional magnetic resonance imaging. Applying a standard generalized linear model analysis approach, our results indicate that selective optogenetic stimulation of THVTA neurons enhanced cerebral blood volume signals in striatal target regions in a dopamine receptor-dependent manner. However, brain-wide voxel-based principal component analysis of the same data set revealed that dopaminergic modulation activates several additional anatomically distinct regions throughout the brain, not typically associated with dopamine release events. Furthermore, explicit pairing of THVTA neuronal activation with a forepaw stimulus of a particular frequency expanded the sensory representation of that stimulus, not exclusively within the somatosensory cortices, but brain-wide. These data suggest that modulation of THVTA neurons can impact brain dynamics across many distributed anatomically distinct regions, even those that receive little to no direct THVTA input.


Frontiers in Neuroendocrinology | 2015

Maternally responsive neurons in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis and medial preoptic area: Putative circuits for regulating anxiety and reward.

Jenna A. McHenry; David R. Rubinow; Garret D. Stuber

Postpartum neuropsychiatric disorders are a major source of morbidity and mortality and affect at least 10% of childbearing women. Affective dysregulation within this context has been identified in association with changes in reproductive steroids. Steroids promote maternal actions and modulate affect, but can also destabilize mood in some but not all women. Potential brain regions that mediate these effects include the medial preoptic area (mPOA) and ventral bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (vBNST). Herein, we review the regulation of neural activity in the mPOA/vBNST by environmental and hormonal concomitants in puerperal females. Such activity may influence maternal anxiety and motivation and have significant implications for postpartum affective disorders. Future directions for research are also explored, including physiological circuit-level approaches to gain insight into the functional connectivity of hormone-responsive maternal circuits that modulate affect.


Behavioral Neuroscience | 2016

The role of ΔfosB in the medial preoptic area: Differential effects of mating and cocaine history.

Jenna A. McHenry; Christopher L. Robison; Genevieve A. Bell; Vincent Vialou; Carlos A. Bolaños-Guzmán; Eric J. Nestler; Elaine M. Hull

The transcription factor deltaFosB (ΔFosB) is induced in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) by repeated exposure to drugs of abuse and natural rewards. Less is known about its role in other brain areas. Here, we compared the effects of mating versus cocaine history on induction of ΔFosB in the medial preoptic area (MPOA), an integral site for reproductive behavior, and in the NAc. ΔFosB immunoreactivity (ir) was increased in the MPOA of previously naïve and experienced male rats that mated the day before euthanasia, compared to unmated controls and experienced males with recent mating abstinence. Western immunoblots confirmed that the 35-37-kDa isoform of ΔFosB was increased more in recently mated males. Conversely, previous plus recent cocaine did not increase ΔFosB-ir in the MPOA, despite an increase in the NAc. Next, a viral vector expressing ΔFosB, its dominant negative antagonist ΔJunD, or green fluorescent protein (GFP) control, were microinjected bilaterally into the MPOA. ΔFosB overexpression impaired copulation and promoted female-directed aggression, compared to ΔJunD and control males. These data suggest that ΔFosB in the mPOA is expressed in an experience-dependent manner and affects systems that coordinate mating and aggression. (PsycINFO Database Record


bioRxiv | 2018

Manipulation of central amygdala neurotensin neurons alters alcohol consumption

Maria Luisa Torruella-Suarez; Jessica R Vandenberg; Gregory J. Tipton; Brennon R Luster; Kedar Dange; Gunjan K Patel; Jenna A. McHenry; J. Andrew Hardaway; Pranish A. Kantak; Nicole A. Crowley; Jeffrey F. DiBerto; Sara Faccidomo; Clyde W. Hodge; Garret D. Stuber; Zoe A. McElligott

The central nucleus of the amygdala plays a significant role in alcohol use and other affective disorders; however, the genetically-defined neuronal subtypes and their projections that govern these behaviors are not well known. Here we show that ablation of neurotensin-expressing neurons in the central nucleus of the amygdala of mice decreases their ethanol consumption and preference for ethanol. Furthermore, optogenetically stimulating projections from these neurons to the parabrachial nucleus is reinforcing, and increases ethanol consumption while reducing food consumption. These data suggest that this central amygdala to parabrachial nucleus projection influences the expression of reward-related phenotypes and is a novel circuit promoting alcohol consumption and regulating state-dependent food consumption.Abstract The central nucleus of the amygdala plays a significant role in alcohol use and other affective disorders; however, the genetically-defined neuronal subtypes and their projections that govern these behaviors are not well known. Here we show that neurotensin neurons in the central nucleus of the amygdala of male mice are activated by in vivo ethanol consumption and that genetic ablation of these neurons decreases ethanol consumption and preference in non-ethanol dependent animals. This ablation did not impact preference for sucrose, saccharin, or quinine. We found that the most robust projection of the central amygdala neurotensin neurons was to the parabrachial nucleus, a brain region known to be important in feeding behaviors, conditioned taste aversion, and alarm. Optogenetic stimulation of projections from these neurons to the parabrachial nucleus is reinforcing, and increases ethanol drinking as well as consumption of sucrose and saccharin solutions. These data suggest that this central amygdala to parabrachial nucleus projection influences the expression of reward-related phenotypes and is a novel circuit promoting consumption of ethanol and palatable fluids.

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Garret D. Stuber

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Elaine M. Hull

Florida State University

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David R. Rubinow

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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J. Elliott Robinson

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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James M. Otis

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Oksana Kosyk

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Zoe A. McElligott

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Christopher L. Robison

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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