Laurent Vincent, Wong Felix L, Balleine Bernard W
Decision Neuroscience Laboratory, School of Psychology, University of New South Wales, Kensington, New South Wales 2052, Australia, and.
Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney, Camperdown, New South Wales 2050, Australia.
J Neurosci. 2017 Nov 8;37(45):10932-10942. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3415-16.2017. Epub 2017 Oct 6.
Animals can readily learn that stimuli predict the absence of specific appetitive outcomes; however, the neural substrates underlying such outcome-specific conditioned inhibition remain largely unexplored. Here, using female and male rats as subjects, we examined the involvement of the lateral habenula (LHb) and of its inputs onto the rostromedial tegmental nucleus (RMTg) in inhibitory learning. In these experiments, we used backward conditioning and contingency reversal to establish outcome-specific conditioned inhibitors for two distinct appetitive outcomes. Then, using the Pavlovian-instrumental transfer paradigm, we assessed the effects of manipulations of the LHb and the LHb-RMTg pathway on that inhibitory encoding. In control animals, we found that an outcome-specific conditioned inhibitor biased choice away from actions delivering that outcome and toward actions earning other outcomes. Importantly, this bias was abolished by both electrolytic lesions of the LHb and selective ablation of LHb neurons using Cre-dependent Caspase3 expression in Cre-expressing neurons projecting to the RMTg. This deficit was specific to conditioned inhibition; an excitatory predictor of a specific outcome-biased choice toward actions delivering the same outcome to a similar degree whether the LHb or the LHb-RMTg network was intact or not. LHb lesions also disrupted the ability of animals to inhibit previously encoded stimulus-outcome contingencies after their reversal, pointing to a critical role of the LHb and of its inputs onto the RMTg in outcome-specific conditioned inhibition in appetitive settings. These findings are consistent with the developing view that the LHb promotes a negative reward prediction error in Pavlovian conditioning. Stimuli that positively or negatively predict rewarding outcomes influence choice between actions that deliver those outcomes. Previous studies have found that a positive predictor of a specific outcome biases choice toward actions delivering that outcome. In contrast, a negative predictor of an outcome biases choice away from actions earning that outcome and toward other actions. Here we reveal that the lateral habenula is critical for negative predictors, but not positive predictors, to affect choice. Furthermore, these effects were found to require activation of lateral habenula inputs to the rostromedial tegmental nucleus. These results are consistent with the view that the lateral habenula establishes inhibitory relationships between stimuli and food outcomes and computes a negative prediction error in Pavlovian conditioning.
动物能够很容易地学会,某些刺激预示着特定的愉悦性结果不会出现;然而,这种特定结果的条件性抑制背后的神经基质在很大程度上仍未被探索。在这里,我们以雌性和雄性大鼠为实验对象,研究了外侧缰核(LHb)及其向嘴内侧被盖核(RMTg)的投射在抑制性学习中的作用。在这些实验中,我们采用逆向条件作用和意外情况反转,为两种不同的愉悦性结果建立特定结果的条件性抑制剂。然后,利用巴甫洛夫式工具性转移范式,我们评估了对LHb和LHb-RMTg通路的操作对这种抑制性编码的影响。在对照动物中,我们发现特定结果的条件性抑制剂会使选择偏向于避开带来该结果的行为,而倾向于获得其他结果的行为。重要的是,LHb的电解损伤以及使用在投射到RMTg的表达Cre的神经元中通过Cre依赖性Caspase3表达对LHb神经元进行选择性消融,均消除了这种偏向。这种缺陷是特定于条件性抑制的;对于特定结果的兴奋性预测因子,无论LHb或LHb-RMTg网络是否完整,都会在相似程度上使选择偏向于做出带来相同结果的行为。LHb损伤还破坏了动物在意外情况反转后抑制先前编码的刺激-结果关联的能力,这表明LHb及其向RMTg的投射在愉悦性环境中的特定结果条件性抑制中起关键作用。这些发现与一种逐渐形成的观点一致,即LHb在巴甫洛夫式条件作用中促进负性奖励预测误差。正向或负向预测奖励性结果的刺激会影响带来这些结果的行为之间的选择。先前的研究发现,特定结果的正向预测因子会使选择偏向于做出带来该结果的行为。相反,结果的负向预测因子会使选择偏向于避开获得该结果的行为,而倾向于其他行为。在这里我们揭示,外侧缰核对负向预测因子而非正向预测因子影响选择至关重要。此外,发现这些效应需要激活外侧缰核向嘴内侧被盖核的投射。这些结果与外侧缰核在刺激和食物结果之间建立抑制性关系并在巴甫洛夫式条件作用中计算负性预测误差的观点一致。