4.5 Article

Hypocretin/orexin preferentially activates caudomedial ventral tegmental area dopamine neurons

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 8, Pages 1629-1640

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2008.06453.x

Keywords

dopamine; hypocretin; nucleus accumbens; orexin; prefrontal cortex; ventral tegmental area

Categories

Funding

  1. PHS [MH62359, DA10681, DA00389]
  2. University of Wisconsin Graduate School

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The hypocretin/orexin (HCRT) neuropeptide system modulates behavioral state and state-dependent processes via actions on multiple neuromodulatory transmitter systems. Recent studies indicate that HCRT selectively increases dopamine (DA) neurotransmission within the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and the shell subregion of the nucleus accumbens (NAs), but not the core subregion of the nucleus accumbens (NAc). The circuitry underlying the differential actions of HCRT across distinct DA systems is unclear. The current study examined whether HCRT preferentially activates PFC- and NAs-projecting relative to NAc-projecting DA neurons within the VTA. One week after infusion of the retrograde tracer fluorogold (FG) into the medial PFC, NAc or NAs, animals received a ventricular infusion of HCRT-1. Subsequent analyses conducted across the rostral-caudal extent of the VTA determined the degree to which: (i) Fos-immunoreactivity (ir) was observed within tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-ir neurons; (ii) TH-ir was observed within FG-ir neurons; and (iii) Fos-ir was observed within FG-ir neurons. HCRT significantly increased Fos-ir in VTA DA (TH-ir) neurons, primarily in a restricted population of small-to-medium-sized DA neurons located within the caudomedial VTA. Furthermore, within this region of the VTA, PFC- and NAs-projecting TH-ir neurons were more likely to contain Fos-ir than were NAc-projecting TH-ir neurons. These results provide novel evidence that HCRT selectively activates PFC- and NAs-projecting DA neurons within the VTA, and suggest a potential role for HCRT in PFC- and NAs-dependent cognitive and/or affective processes. Moreover, these and other observations suggest that the dysregulation of HCRT-DA interactions could contribute to cognitive/affective dysfunction associated with a variety of behavioral disorders.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available