Psychedelic control of neuroimmune interactions governing fear.

Nature
Authors
Abstract

Neuroimmune interactions-signals transmitted between immune and brain cells-regulate many aspects of tissue physiology, including responses to psychological stress, which can predispose individuals to develop neuropsychiatric diseases. Still, the interactions between haematopoietic and brain-resident cells that influence complex behaviours are poorly understood. Here, we use a combination of genomic and behavioural screens to show that astrocytes in the amygdala limit stress-induced fear behaviour through epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). Mechanistically, EGFR expression in amygdala astrocytes inhibits a stress-induced, pro-inflammatory signal-transduction cascade that facilitates neuron-glial crosstalk and stress-induced fear behaviour through the orphan nuclear receptor NR2F2 in amygdala neurons. In turn, decreased EGFR signalling and fear behaviour are associated with the recruitment of meningeal monocytes during chronic stress. This set of neuroimmune interactions is therapeutically targetable through the administration of psychedelic compounds, which reversed the accumulation of monocytes in the brain meninges along with fear behaviour. Together with validation in clinical samples, these data suggest that psychedelics can be used to target neuroimmune interactions relevant to neuropsychiatric disorders and potentially other inflammatory diseases.

Year of Publication
2025
Journal
Nature
Date Published
04/2025
ISSN
1476-4687
DOI
10.1038/s41586-025-08880-9
PubMed ID
40269152
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