The multi-stage plasticity in the aggression circuit underlying the winner effect

Cell. 2024 Oct 9:S0092-8674(24)01088-2. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2024.09.030. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Winning increases the readiness to attack and the probability of winning, a widespread phenomenon known as the "winner effect." Here, we reveal a transition from target-specific to generalized aggression enhancement over 10 days of winning in male mice. This behavioral change is supported by three causally linked plasticity events in the ventrolateral part of the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMHvl), a critical node for aggression. Over 10 days of winning, VMHvl cells experience monotonic potentiation of long-range excitatory inputs, transient local connectivity strengthening, and a delayed excitability increase. Optogenetically coactivating the posterior amygdala (PA) terminals and VMHvl cells potentiates the PA-VMHvl pathway and triggers the same cascade of plasticity events observed during repeated winning. Optogenetically blocking PA-VMHvl synaptic potentiation eliminates all winning-induced plasticity. These results reveal the complex Hebbian synaptic and excitability plasticity in the aggression circuit during winning, ultimately leading to increased "aggressiveness" in repeated winners.

Keywords: VMHvl; aggression; cell excitability; local connectivity; neural plasticity; posterior amygdala; spine; synaptic potentiation; testosterone; winner effect.