4.4 Article

The tubular striatum and nucleus accumbens distinctly represent reward-taking and reward-seeking

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
卷 125, 期 1, 页码 166-183

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00495.2020

关键词

consummatory behavior; goal-directed behavior; olfactory tubercle; relapse; ventral striatopallidal complex

资金

  1. NIH [R01DC014443, R01DC016519, R01DA049545, R01DA049449]
  2. University of Florida Center for Smell and Taste
  3. [F32DC018452]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The NAc and TuS subregions of the ventral striatum distinctly represent reward-taking and reward-seeking behaviors. TuS neurons show greater changes in firing during reward-taking and extinction, while NAc neurons show greater changes during cue-induced reward-seeking. TuS neural activity predicts reward-seeking behavior, while NAc activity does not in the tested behavioral paradigm.
The ventral striatum regulates motivated behaviors that are essential for survival. The ventral striatum contains both the nucleus accumbens (NAc), which is well established to contribute to motivated behavior, and the adjacent tubular striatum (TuS), which is poorly understood in this context. We reasoned that these ventral striatal subregions may be uniquely specialized in their neural representation of goal-directed behavior. To test this, we simultaneously examined TuS and NAc single-unit activity as male mice engaged in a sucrose self-administration task, which included extinction and cue-induced reinstatement sessions. Although background levels of activity were comparable between regions, more TuS neurons were recruited upon reward-taking, and among recruited neurons, TuS neurons displayed greater changes in their firing during reward-taking and extinction than those in the NAc. Conversely, NAc neurons displayed greater changes in their firing during cue-reinstated reward-seeking. Interestingly, at least in the context of this behavioral paradigm, TuS neural activity predicted reward-seeking, whereas NAc activity did not. Together, by directly comparing their dynamics in several behavioral contexts, this work reveals that the NAc and TuS ventral striatum subregions distinctly represent reward-taking and reward-seeking. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The ventral striatum, considered the reward circuitry hub, is composed of two regions: the NAc, which is well established for its role in reward processing, and the TuS, which has been largely excluded from such studies. This study provides a first step in directly contextualizing the TuS's activity in relation to that in the NAc and, by doing so, establishes a critical framework for future research seeking to better understand the brain basis for drug addiction.

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