Neurotensin orchestrates valence assignment in the amygdala
BEYELER, Anna
Neurocentre Magendie : Physiopathologie de la Plasticité Neuronale [U1215 Inserm - UB]
< Leer menos
Neurocentre Magendie : Physiopathologie de la Plasticité Neuronale [U1215 Inserm - UB]
Idioma
EN
Document de travail - Pré-publication
Resumen en inglés
The ability to associate temporally segregated information and assign positive or negative valence to environmental cues is paramount for survival. Studies have shown that different basolateral amygdala (BLA) projections ...Leer más >
The ability to associate temporally segregated information and assign positive or negative valence to environmental cues is paramount for survival. Studies have shown that different basolateral amygdala (BLA) projections are potentiated following reward or punishment learning1–7. However, we do not yet understand how valence specific information is routed to the BLA neurons with the appropriate downstream projections. Nor do we understand how to reconcile the subsecond timescales of synaptic plasticity8–11 with the longer timescales separating the predictive cues from their outcomes. Here, we demonstrate that neurotensin (NT) neurons in the paraventricular nucleus of the thalamus (PVT) projecting to the BLA (PVT-BLA:NT) mediate valence assignment by exerting concentration-dependent modulation in BLA during associative learning. We found that optogenetic activation of the PVT-BLA:NT projection promotes reward learning, while PVT-BLA projection-specific Nt gene knockout augments punishment learning. Using genetically encoded calcium and NT sensors, we further revealed that both calcium dynamics within the PVT-BLA:NT projection and NT concentrations in the BLA are enhanced after reward learning and reduced after punishment learning. Finally, we showed that CRISPR-mediated knockout of the Nt gene in the PVT-BLA pathway blunts BLA neural dynamics and attenuates the preference to active behavioral strategies to reward and punishment predictive cues. Taken together, we have identified NT as a neuropeptide that signals valence in the BLA, and showed that NT is a critical neuromodulator that orchestrates positive and negative valence assignment in amygdala neurons by extending valence-specific plasticity to behaviorally-relevant timescales.< Leer menos
Palabras clave en inglés
Adult
Animal cell
Animal experiment
Animal tissue
Article
Associative learning
Basolateral amygdala
Brain region
C57BL 6 mouse
Cell culture
Cohort analysis
Confocal microscopy
Controlled study
CRISPR-CAS9 system
Female
Human
In situ hybridization
In vivo study
Male
Nerve cell plasticity
Nervous system electrophysiology
Neuromodulation
Nonhuman
Nts gene
Open field test
Optogenetics
Paraventricular thalamic nucleus
Protein expression
Protein function
Signal transduction
Whole cell patch clamp
Amygdala
Physiology
Reward
Basolateral Nuclear Complex
Calcium
Neurotensin
Neuropeptide
Glutamic acid
Centros de investigación