The Habenula’s role in major depressive disorder: recent insights from preclinical and human studies
Feiteng Lin, Kayleigh Casmey, Sierra A. Codeluppi-Arrowsmith, Gustavo Turecki

TL;DR
This review explores how the habenula, a brain region, is linked to depression and how its dysfunction may contribute to mood disorders.
Contribution
The paper highlights subregion-specific molecular and neurocircuitry changes in the habenula associated with depression.
Findings
The medial habenula shows downregulated CAPS2 and nicotinic signaling in depression.
The lateral habenula exhibits dysregulated Kir4.1, CaMKIIβ, PP2A, and SNORA69 in depression models.
MDD is associated with structural and functional changes in the habenula, including reduced cell counts and connectivity.
Abstract
The habenula is a small epithalamic structure composed of two distinct subregions, the medial (MHb) and lateral (LHb) habenula. It serves as a critical hub for integrating fronto-limbic and brainstem signals to regulate motivation, mood, and reward processing. Therefore, it is unsurprising that dysfunction of the habenula has been implicated in several mood disorders including major depressive disorder (MDD), a debilitating mood disorder marked by low mood and feelings of hopelessness. This review synthesizes recent advances in understanding the habenula’s neurocircuitry, molecular landscape, and role in MDD pathophysiology, while evaluating its potential as a therapeutic target. Specifically, emerging evidence highlights subregion-specific pathology. Indeed, in MDD and in animal models of depression, the MHb has been shown to exhibit marked downregulation of calcium-dependent activator…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors Study · Neurotransmitter Receptor Influence on Behavior · Treatment of Major Depression
