Food Restriction Engages Prefrontal Corticostriatal Cells and Local Microcircuitry to Drive the Decision to Run versus Conserve Energy

Author:

Santiago Adrienne N1ORCID,Makowicz Emily A12ORCID,Du Muzi13,Aoki Chiye14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Neural Science, New York University, 4 Washington place, New York, NY 10003, USA

2. Hunter College, City University of New York, 695 Park Ave, New York, NY, 10065, USA

3. Langone Neuroscience Institute, New York University, 435 East 30th St, New York, NY 10016, USA

4. New York University Shanghai, 1555 Century Ave, Pudong, Shanghai 200122, China

Abstract

Abstract Food restriction (FR) evokes running, which may promote adaptive foraging in times of food scarcity, but can become lethal if energy expenditure exceeds caloric availability. Here, we demonstrate that chemogenetic activation of either the general medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) pyramidal cell population, or the subpopulation projecting to dorsal striatum (DS) drives running specifically during hours preceding limited food availability, and not during ad libitum food availability. Conversely, suppression of mPFC pyramidal cells generally, or targeting mPFC-to-DS cells, reduced wheel running specifically during FR and not during ad libitum food access. Post mortem c-Fos analysis and electron microscopy of mPFC layer 5 revealed distinguishing characteristics of mPFC-to-DS cells, when compared to neighboring non–DS-projecting pyramidal cells: 1) greater recruitment of GABAergic activity and 2) less axo-somatic GABAergic innervation. Together, these attributes position the mPFC-to-DS subset of pyramidal cells to dominate mPFC excitatory outflow, particularly during FR, revealing a specific and causal role for mPFC-to-DS control of the decision to run during food scarcity. Individual differences in GABAergic activity correlate with running response to further support this interpretation. FR enhancement of PFC-to-DS activity may influence neural circuits both in studies using FR to motivate animal behavior and in human conditions hallmarked by FR.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Vulnerable Brain Project

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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