Author:
Levcik David,Sugi Adam H.,Pochapski José A.,Baltazar Gabriel,Pulido Laura N.,Villas-Boas Cyrus,Aguilar-Rivera Marcelo,Fuentes-Flores Romulo,Nicola Saleem M.,Cunha Claudio Da
Abstract
AbstractThe nucleus accumbens (NAc) is considered an interface between motivation and action, with NAc neurons playing an important role in promoting reward approach. However, the encoding by NAc neurons that contribute to this role remains unknown. Here, we trained male rats to find rewards in an 8-arm radial maze. The activity of 62 neurons, mostly in the shell of the NAc, were recorded while rats ran towards each reward place. General linear model (GLM) analysis showed that variables related to the vigor of the locomotor approach, like speed and acceleration, and the fraction of the approach run completed were the best predictors of the firing rate for most NAc neurons. Nearly 23% of the recorded neurons, here named locomotion-off cells, were inhibited during the entire approach run, suggesting that reduction in firing of these neurons promotes initiation of locomotor approach. Another 24% of the neurons presented a peak of activity during acceleration followed by a valley during deceleration (peak-valley cells). Together, these neurons accounted for most of the speed and acceleration encoding identified in the GLM analysis. Cross-correlations between firing and speed indicated that the spikes of peak-valley cells were followed by increases in speed, suggesting that the activity of these neurons drives acceleration. In contrast, a further 19% of neurons presented a valley during acceleration followed by a peak just prior to or after reaching reward (valley-peak cells). These findings suggest that these three classes of NAc neurons control the initiation and vigor of the locomotor approach to reward.Significance StatementDeciphering the mechanisms by which the NAc controls the vigor of motivated behavior is critical to better understand and treat psychiatric conditions in which motivation is dysregulated. Manipulations of the NAc profoundly impair subjects’ ability to spontaneously approach reward-associated locations, preventing them from exerting effort to obtain reward. Here, we identify for the first time specific activity of NAc neurons in relation to spontaneous approach behavior. We discover three classes of neurons that could control initiation of movement and the speed vs. time trajectory during locomotor approach. These results suggest a prominent but heretofore unknown role for the NAc in regulating the kinematics of reward approach locomotion.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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