Gadziola Marie A, Wesson Daniel W
Departments of Neurosciences, School of Medicine, and.
Departments of Neurosciences, School of Medicine, and Biology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106
J Neurosci. 2016 Jan 13;36(2):548-60. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3328-15.2016.
The ventral striatum is critical for evaluating reward information and the initiation of goal-directed behaviors. The many cellular, afferent, and efferent similarities between the ventral striatum's nucleus accumbens and olfactory tubercle (OT) suggests the distributed involvement of neurons within the ventral striatopallidal complex in motivated behaviors. Although the nucleus accumbens has an established role in representing goal-directed actions and their outcomes, it is not known whether this function is localized within the nucleus accumbens or distributed also within the OT. Answering such a fundamental question will expand our understanding of the neural mechanisms underlying motivated behaviors. Here we address whether the OT encodes natural reinforcers and serves as a substrate for motivational information processing. In recordings from mice engaged in a novel water-motivated instrumental task, we report that OT neurons modulate their firing rate during initiation and progression of the instrumental licking behavior, with some activity being internally generated and preceding the first lick. We further found that as motivational drive decreases throughout a session, the activity of OT neurons is enhanced earlier relative to the behavioral action. Additionally, OT neurons discriminate the types and magnitudes of fluid reinforcers. Together, these data suggest that the processing of reward information and the orchestration of goal-directed behaviors is a global principle of the ventral striatum and have important implications for understanding the neural systems subserving addiction and mood disorders.
Goal-directed behaviors are widespread among animals and underlie complex behaviors ranging from food intake, social behavior, and even pathological conditions, such as gambling and drug addiction. The ventral striatum is a neural system critical for evaluating reward information and the initiation of goal-directed behaviors. Here we show that neurons in the olfactory tubercle subregion of the ventral striatum robustly encode the onset and progression of motivated behaviors, and discriminate the type and magnitude of a reward. Our findings are novel in showing that olfactory tubercle neurons participate in such coding schemes and are in accordance with the principle that ventral striatum substructures may cooperate to guide motivated behaviors.
腹侧纹状体对于评估奖励信息和启动目标导向行为至关重要。腹侧纹状体的伏隔核与嗅结节(OT)在细胞、传入和传出方面存在诸多相似之处,这表明腹侧纹状体苍白球复合体中的神经元在动机行为中存在分布式参与。尽管伏隔核在表征目标导向行为及其结果方面已确立了作用,但尚不清楚该功能是局限于伏隔核内还是也分布于嗅结节内。回答这样一个基本问题将扩展我们对动机行为背后神经机制的理解。在此,我们探讨嗅结节是否编码自然强化物并作为动机信息处理的底物。在对参与新型水动机操作性任务的小鼠进行的记录中,我们报告称,嗅结节神经元在操作性舔舐行为的启动和进行过程中调节其放电频率,一些活动是内在产生的且先于第一次舔舐。我们进一步发现,随着整个实验过程中动机驱动力的降低,嗅结节神经元的活动相对于行为动作更早增强。此外,嗅结节神经元能够区分液体强化物的类型和大小。总之,这些数据表明奖励信息的处理和目标导向行为的协调是腹侧纹状体的一个全局原则,对理解支持成瘾和情绪障碍的神经系统具有重要意义。
目标导向行为在动物中广泛存在,是包括食物摄入、社会行为甚至赌博和药物成瘾等病理状况在内的复杂行为的基础。腹侧纹状体是评估奖励信息和启动目标导向行为的关键神经系统。在此我们表明,腹侧纹状体嗅结节亚区的神经元有力地编码动机行为的起始和进展,并区分奖励的类型和大小。我们的发现表明嗅结节神经元参与此类编码方案,这是新颖的,并且符合腹侧纹状体亚结构可能协同指导动机行为的原则。