Optimally orchestrating complex behavioral states, such as the pursuit and consumption
of food, is critical for an organism's survival. The lateral hypothalamus (LH) is
a neuroanatomical region essential for appetitive and consummatory behaviors, but
whether individual neurons within the LH differentially contribute to these interconnected
processes is unknown. Here, we show that selective optogenetic stimulation of a molecularly
defined subset of LH GABAergic (Vgat-expressing) neurons enhances both appetitive
and consummatory behaviors, whereas genetic ablation of these neurons reduced these
phenotypes. Furthermore, this targeted LH subpopulation is distinct from cells containing
the feeding-related neuropeptides, melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH), and orexin
(Orx). Employing in vivo calcium imaging in freely behaving mice to record activity
dynamics from hundreds of cells, we identified individual LH GABAergic neurons that
preferentially encode aspects of either appetitive or consummatory behaviors, but
rarely both. These tightly regulated, yet highly intertwined, behavioral processes
are thus dissociable at the cellular level.