Thalamus sends information about arousal but not valence to the amygdala
-
Published:2022-12-16
Issue:3
Volume:240
Page:477-499
-
ISSN:0033-3158
-
Container-title:Psychopharmacology
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Psychopharmacology
Author:
Leppla Chris A., Keyes Laurel R., Glober Gordon, Matthews Gillian A., Batra Kanha, Jay Maya, Feng Yu, Chen Hannah S., Mills Fergil, Delahanty Jeremy, Olson Jacob M., Nieh Edward H., Namburi Praneeth, Wildes Craig, Wichmann Romy, Beyeler Anna, Kimchi Eyal Y., Tye Kay M.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract
Rationale
The basolateral amygdala (BLA) and medial geniculate nucleus of the thalamus (MGN) have both been shown to be necessary for the formation of associative learning. While the role that the BLA plays in this process has long been emphasized, the MGN has been less well-studied and surrounded by debate regarding whether the relay of sensory information is active or passive.
Objectives
We seek to understand the role the MGN has within the thalamoamgydala circuit in the formation of associative learning.
Methods
Here, we use optogenetics and in vivo electrophysiological recordings to dissect the MGN-BLA circuit and explore the specific subpopulations for evidence of learning and synthesis of information that could impact downstream BLA encoding. We employ various machine learning techniques to investigate function within neural subpopulations. We introduce a novel method to investigate tonic changes across trial-by-trial structure, which offers an alternative approach to traditional trial-averaging techniques.
Results
We find that the MGN appears to encode arousal but not valence, unlike the BLA which encodes for both. We find that the MGN and the BLA appear to react differently to expected and unexpected outcomes; the BLA biased responses toward reward prediction error and the MGN focused on anticipated punishment. We uncover evidence of tonic changes by visualizing changes across trials during inter-trial intervals (baseline epochs) for a subset of cells.
Conclusion
We conclude that the MGN-BLA projector population acts as both filter and transferer of information by relaying information about the salience of cues to the amygdala, but these signals are not valence-specified.
Funder
National Institute of Mental Health
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference54 articles.
1. Allsop SA, Wichmann R, Mills F, Burgos-Robles A, Chang C-J, Felix-Ortiz AC, Vienne A, Beyeler A, Izadmehr EM, Glober G, Cum MI, Stergiadou J, Anandalingam KK, Farris K, Namburi P, Leppla CA, Weddington JC, Nieh EH, Smith AC, Ba D, Brown EN, Tye KM (2018) Corticoamygdala transfer of socially derived information gates observational learning. Cell 173:1329-1342.e18. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2018.04.004 2. Antunes R, Moita MA (2010) Discriminative auditory fear learning requires both tuned and nontuned auditory pathways to the amygdala. J Neurosci 30:9782–9787. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1037-10.2010 3. Aron A, Fisher H, Mashek DJ, Strong G, Li H, Brown LL (2005) Reward, motivation, and emotion systems associated with early-stage intense romantic love. J Neurophysiol 94:327–337. https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00838.2004 4. Beyeler A, Namburi P, Glober GF, Simonnet C, Calhoon GG, Conyers GF, Luck R, Wildes CP, Tye KM (2016) Divergent routing of positive and negative information from the amygdala during memory retrieval. Neuron 90:348–361. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2016.03.004 5. Beyeler A, Chang C-J, Silvestre M, Lévêque C, Namburi P, Wildes CP, Tye KM (2018) Organization of valence-encoding and projection-defined neurons in the basolateral amygdala. Cell Rep 22:905–918. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2017.12.097
Cited by
7 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|