Mechanism for differential recruitment of orbitostriatal transmission during actions and outcomes following chronic alcohol exposure

Author:

Renteria Rafael1ORCID,Cazares Christian2ORCID,Baltz Emily T2ORCID,Schreiner Drew C1,Yalcinbas Ege A2ORCID,Steinkellner Thomas3,Hnasko Thomas S234ORCID,Gremel Christina M12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, University of California San Diego, San Diego, United States

2. The Neurosciences Graduate Program, University of California San Diego, San Diego, United States

3. Department of Neurosciences, University of California San Diego, San Diego, United States

4. Research Service, VA San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, United States

Abstract

Psychiatric disease often produces symptoms that have divergent effects on neural activity. For example, in drug dependence, dysfunctional value-based decision-making and compulsive-like actions have been linked to hypo- and hyperactivity of orbital frontal cortex (OFC)-basal ganglia circuits, respectively; however, the underlying mechanisms are unknown. Here we show that alcohol-exposed mice have enhanced activity in OFC terminals in dorsal striatum (OFC-DS) associated with actions, but reduced activity of the same terminals during periods of outcome retrieval, corresponding with a loss of outcome control over decision-making. Disrupted OFC-DS terminal activity was due to a dysfunction of dopamine-type 1 receptors on spiny projection neurons (D1R SPNs) that resulted in increased retrograde endocannabinoid signaling at OFC-D1R SPN synapses reducing OFC-DS transmission. Blocking CB1 receptors restored OFC-DS activity in vivo and rescued outcome-based control over decision-making. These findings demonstrate a circuit-, synapse-, and computation-specific mechanism gating OFC activity in alcohol-exposed mice.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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