4.7 Article

A Pause in Nucleus Accumbens Neuron Firing Is Required to Initiate and Maintain Feeding

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 30, Issue 13, Pages 4746-4756

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0197-10.2010

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Funding

  1. State of California for medical research on alcohol and substance abuse through the University of California, San Francisco
  2. Young Investigator Awards
  3. National Alliance for the Research on Schizophrenia and Depression
  4. National Institute of Mental Health

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Nucleus accumbens (NAc) inactivation increases food intake, indicating that NAc neurons exert ongoing inhibition of feeding. We previously described a subpopulation of NAc neurons that pause during sucrose licking and proposed that the pause permits consumption. We tested this hypothesis by first recording NAc neurons during sucrose consumption, and then electrically stimulating through the same electrodes. A large proportion of NAc shell and core neurons were inhibited during sucrose consumption, and local electrical stimulation abruptly interrupted licking. Effective stimulation sites were more anterior than ineffective sites in NAc. At low stimulus intensities, licking resumed immediately on stimulation offset. The latency to lick resumption from NAc neuron inhibition onset (similar to 460 ms) was very similar to that after electrical stimulation offset (similar to 40 ms). These results directly support the hypothesis that a significant subpopulation of NAc neurons inhibit palatable food consumption and that a pause in their firing is required to initiate and maintain consumption.

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