4.8 Article

Distinct Subpopulations of Nucleus Accumbens Dynorphin Neurons Drive Aversion and Reward

Journal

NEURON
Volume 87, Issue 5, Pages 1063-1077

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2015.08.019

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Funding

  1. NIDA [R01 DA033396, R01DA037152, K99/R00, DA038725]
  2. NIMH [F31 MH101956, TR01NS081707, R01DK075632, R37DK053477, R01DK089044, R01DK071051, R01DK096010, P30DK046200]

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The nucleus accumbens (NAc) and the dynorphinergic system are widely implicated in motivated behaviors. Prior studies have shown that activation of the dynorphin-kappa opioid receptor (KOR) system leads to aversive, dysphoria-like behavior. However, the endogenous sources of dynorphin in these circuits remain unknown. We investigated whether dynorphinergic neuronal firing in the NAc is sufficient to induce aversive behaviors. We found that photo-stimulation of dynorphinergic cells in the ventral NAc shell elicits robust conditioned and realtime aversive behavior via KOR activation, and in contrast, photostimulation of dorsal NAc shell dynorphin cells induced a KOR-mediated place preference and was positively reinforcing. These results show previously unknown discrete subregions of dynorphin-containing cells in the NAc shell that selectively drive opposing behaviors. Understanding the discrete regional specificity by which NAc dynorphinerigic cells regulate preference and aversion provides insight into motivated behaviors that are dysregulated in stress, reward, and psychiatric disease.

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