Abstract
AbstractAdolescent brain development is characterized by dramatic neuronal remodeling in the prefrontal cortex. This plasticity is presumed to act in part to “set the stage” for prefrontal cortical function in adulthood, but causal relationships have largely not been verified. Integrins are cell adhesion factors that provide a link between the extracellular matrix and the intracellular actin cytoskeleton. We find that β1-integrin presence in the prelimbic subregion of the prefrontal cortex (PL) during adolescence, but not adulthood, is necessary for adult mice to select actions based on reward likelihood and value. These behaviors require coordinated limbic-frontal-striatal circuits. We identified projections from the basolateral amygdala (BLA) to PL as being necessary for mice to express learned response strategies. We then visualized adolescent PL neurons receiving input from the BLA and projecting to the dorsomedial striatum (DMS), a primary striatal output by which the PL controls reward-related behavior. These projection-defined neurons had a more “adult-like” morphology relative to a general population of layer V PL neurons. β1-integrin loss caused the overexpression of stubby-type dendritic spines at the expense of more mature spines, a phenotype not observed when β1-integrins were silenced before or after adolescence. Together, these experiments localize β1-integrin-mediated cell adhesion activity within a developing di-synaptic circuit that coordinates flexible action.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory