The basolateral amygdala (BLA) plays a crucial role in emotional learning irrespective of valence1–5. While the BLA projection to the nucleus accumbens (NAc) is hypothesized to modulate cue-triggered motivated behaviors4, 6, 7,, our understanding of the interaction between these two brain regions has been limited by the inability to manipulate neural circuit elements of this pathway selectively during behavior. To circumvent this limitation, we used in vivo optogenetic stimulation or inhibition of glutamatergic fibers from the BLA to the NAc, coupled with intracranial pharmacology and ex vivo electrophysiology. We show that optical stimulation of the BLA-to-NAc pathway in mice reinforces behavioral responding to earn additional optical stimulations of these synaptic inputs. Optical stimulation of BLA-to-NAc glutamatergic fibers required intra-NAc dopamine D1-type, but not D2-type, receptor signaling. Brief optical inhibition of BLA-to-NAc fibers reduced cue-evoked intake of sucrose, demonstrating an important role of this specific pathway in controlling naturally occurring reward-related behavior. Moreover, while optical stimulation of medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) to NAc glutamatergic fibers also elicited reliable excitatory synaptic responses, optical self-stimulation behavior was not observed by activation of this pathway. These data suggest that while the BLA is important for processing both positive and negative affect, the BLA-to-NAc glutamatergic pathway in conjunction with dopamine signaling in the NAc promotes motivated behavioral responding.
Dopamine neurotransmission in the dorsal hippocampus is critical for a range of functions from spatial learning and synaptic plasticity to the deficits underlying psychiatric disorders such as attentiondeficit hyperactivity disorder. The ventral tegmental area (VTA) is the presumed source of dopamine in the dorsal hippocampus. However, there is a surprising scarcity of VTA dopamine axons in the dorsal hippocampus despite the dense network of dopamine receptors. We have explored this apparent paradox using optogenetic, biochemical, and behavioral approaches and found that dopaminergic axons and subsequent dopamine release in the dorsal hippocampus originate from neurons of the locus coeruleus (LC). Photostimulation of LC axons produced an increase in dopamine release in the dorsal hippocampus as revealed by high-performance liquid chromatography. Furthermore, optogenetically induced release of dopamine from the LC into the dorsal hippocampus enhanced selective attention and spatial object recognition via the dopamine D1/D5 receptor. These results suggest that spatial learning and memory are energized by the release of dopamine in the dorsal hippocampus from noradrenergic neurons of the LC. The present findings are critical for identifying the neural circuits that enable proper attention selection and successful learning and memory.dopamine | locus coeruleus | hippocampus | memory | attention D opamine is a neurotransmitter released throughout the brain to encode salience and facilitate the formation of associative memory (1, 2). When released into the dorsal hippocampus, dopamine binds to D1/D5 receptors to promote attention, episodic memory formation, spatial learning, and synaptic plasticity (3-5). Successful spatial learning requires that hippocampal place cells, location-encoding pyramidal neurons (6), display consistent and stable patterns of neural activity, a process that can be enhanced by selective attention to spatial cues and by dopamine agonists (7,8). Conversely, dopamine receptor blockade attenuates the ability of spatial attention to stabilize the firing pattern of hippocampal place cells (8). The role of dopamine in driving attentional processes is highlighted by the fact that methylphenidate, one of the most common treatments for attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), improves attention by increasing synaptic availability of dopamine in the hippocampus, as well as in the prefrontal cortex and striatum (9-11). These findings suggest that dopamine is critical for the selective attention underlying spatial learning and memory.For decades, the ventral tegmental area (VTA) has been the presumed source of hippocampal dopamine. However, in recent years, the source of dopamine in the dorsal hippocampus has become less clear. McNamara et al. (12) argued that a dopaminergic projection from the VTA to the dorsal hippocampus promoted hippocampal reactivation during sleep and stabilized memory. However, only 10% of the sparse projection from the VTA to the hippocampus contains dopamine, raising the...
The lateral hypothalamus (LH) sends a dense glutamatergic and peptidergic projection to dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA), a cell group known to promote reinforcement and aspects of reward. The role of the LH to VTA projection in reward-seeking behavior can be informed by using optogenetic techniques to dissociate the actions of LH neurons from those of other descending forebrain inputs to the VTA. In the present study, we identify the effect of neurotensin (NT), one of the most abundant peptides in the LH to VTA projection, on excitatory synaptic transmission in the VTA and reward-seeking behavior. Mice displayed robust intracranial self-stimulation of LH to VTA fibers, an operant behavior mediated by NT 1 receptors (Nts1) and NMDA receptors. Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings of VTA dopamine neurons demonstrated that NT (10 nM) potentiated NMDA-mediated EPSCs via Nts1. Results suggest that NT release from the LH into the VTA activates Nts1, thereby potentiating NMDA-mediated EPSCs and promoting reward. The striking behavioral and electrophysiological effects of NT and glutamate highlight the LH to VTA pathway as an important component of reward.
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