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1.
Nature ; 627(8003): 358-366, 2024 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38418885

Astrocytes are heterogeneous glial cells of the central nervous system1-3. However, the physiological relevance of astrocyte diversity for neural circuits and behaviour remains unclear. Here we show that a specific population of astrocytes in the central striatum expresses µ-crystallin (encoded by Crym in mice and CRYM in humans) that is associated with several human diseases, including neuropsychiatric disorders4-7. In adult mice, reducing the levels of µ-crystallin in striatal astrocytes through CRISPR-Cas9-mediated knockout of Crym resulted in perseverative behaviours, increased fast synaptic excitation in medium spiny neurons and dysfunctional excitatory-inhibitory synaptic balance. Increased perseveration stemmed from the loss of astrocyte-gated control of neurotransmitter release from presynaptic terminals of orbitofrontal cortex-striatum projections. We found that perseveration could be remedied using presynaptic inhibitory chemogenetics8, and that this treatment also corrected the synaptic deficits. Together, our findings reveal converging molecular, synaptic, circuit and behavioural mechanisms by which a molecularly defined and allocated population of striatal astrocytes gates perseveration phenotypes that accompany neuropsychiatric disorders9-12. Our data show that Crym-positive striatal astrocytes have key biological functions within the central nervous system, and uncover astrocyte-neuron interaction mechanisms that could be targeted in treatments for perseveration.


Astrocytes , Corpus Striatum , Rumination, Cognitive , mu-Crystallins , Animals , Humans , Mice , Astrocytes/metabolism , Corpus Striatum/cytology , Corpus Striatum/physiology , Gene Editing , Gene Knockout Techniques , mu-Crystallins/deficiency , mu-Crystallins/genetics , mu-Crystallins/metabolism , Rumination, Cognitive/physiology , Synaptic Transmission , CRISPR-Cas Systems , Medium Spiny Neurons/metabolism , Synapses/metabolism , Prefrontal Cortex/cytology , Prefrontal Cortex/metabolism , Presynaptic Terminals/metabolism , Neural Inhibition
2.
J Neurosci Res ; 95(1-2): 422-436, 2017 01 02.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27870426

The use of tobacco products represents a major public health concern, especially among women. Epidemiological data have consistently demonstrated that women have less success quitting tobacco use and a higher risk for developing tobacco-related diseases. The deleterious effects of nicotine are not restricted to adulthood, as nicotinic acetylcholine receptors regulate critical aspects of neural development. However, the exact mechanisms underlying the particular sensitivity of women to develop tobacco dependence have not been well elucidated. In this mini-review, we show that gonadal hormone-mediated sexual differentiation of the brain may be an important determinant of sex differences in the effects of nicotine. We highlight direct interactions between sex steroid hormones and ligand-gated ion channels critical for brain maturation, and discuss the extended and profound sexual differentiation of the brain. We emphasize that nicotine exposure during the perinatal and adolescent periods interferes with normal sexual differentiation and can induce long-lasting, sex-dependent alterations in neuronal structure, cognitive and executive function, learning and memory, and reward processing. We stress important age and sex differences in nicotine's effects and emphasize the importance of including these factors in preclinical research that models tobacco dependence. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Brain , Nicotine/pharmacology , Nicotinic Agonists/pharmacology , Sex Characteristics , Animals , Brain/drug effects , Brain/growth & development , Brain/metabolism , Cognition/drug effects , Humans , Learning/drug effects
4.
Sci Rep ; 6: 20231, 2016 Feb 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26869075

Prolonged mesolimbic dopamine concentration changes have been detected during spatial navigation, but little is known about the conditions that engender this signaling profile or how it develops with learning. To address this, we monitored dopamine concentration changes in the nucleus accumbens core of rats throughout acquisition and performance of an instrumental action sequence task. Prolonged dopamine concentration changes were detected that ramped up as rats executed each action sequence and declined after earned reward collection. With learning, dopamine concentration began to rise increasingly earlier in the execution of the sequence and ultimately backpropagated away from stereotyped sequence actions, becoming only transiently elevated by the most distal and unexpected reward predictor. Action sequence-related dopamine signaling was reactivated in well-trained rats if they became disengaged in the task and in response to an unexpected change in the value, but not identity of the earned reward. Throughout training and test, dopamine signaling correlated with sequence performance. These results suggest that action sequences can engender a prolonged mode of dopamine signaling in the nucleus accumbens core and that such signaling relates to elements of the motivation underlying sequence execution and is dynamic with learning, overtraining and violations in reward expectation.


Dopamine/metabolism , Learning , Nucleus Accumbens/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Task Performance and Analysis , Animals , Discrimination, Psychological , Male , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Reward , Stereotyped Behavior
5.
Addict Biol ; 21(2): 221-33, 2016 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25081350

Through incentive learning, the emotional experience of a reward in a relevant need state (e.g. hunger for food) sets the incentive value that guides the performance of actions that earn that reward when the need state is encountered again. Opiate withdrawal has been proposed as a need state in which, through experience, opiate value can be increased, resulting in escalated opiate self-administration. Endogenous opioid transmission plays anatomically dissociable roles in the positive emotional experience of reward consumption and incentive learning. We, therefore, sought to determine if chronic opiate exposure and withdrawal produces a disruption in the fundamental incentive learning process such that reward seeking, even for non-opiate rewards, can become maladaptive, inconsistent with the emotional experience of reward consumption and irrespective of need. Rats trained to earn sucrose or water on a reward-seeking chain were treated with morphine (10-30 mg/kg, s.c.) daily for 11 days prior to testing in withdrawal. Opiate-withdrawn rats showed elevated reward-seeking actions, but only after they experienced the reward in withdrawal, an effect that was strongest in early (1-3 days), as opposed to late (14-16 days), withdrawal. This was sufficient to overcome a negative reward value change induced by sucrose experience in satiety and, in certain circumstances, was inconsistent with the emotional experience of reward consumption. Lastly, we found that early opiate withdrawal-induced inflation of reward value was blocked by inactivation of basolateral amygdala mu opioid receptors. These data suggest that in early opiate withdrawal, the incentive learning process is disrupted, resulting in maladaptive reward seeking.


Analgesics, Opioid/pharmacology , Morphine/pharmacology , Reward , Amygdala/drug effects , Animals , Conditioning, Operant/drug effects , Drug-Seeking Behavior/drug effects , Male , Motivation/drug effects , Rats, Long-Evans , Receptors, Opioid, mu/drug effects , Substance Withdrawal Syndrome/physiopathology , Sucrose/pharmacology
6.
Sci Rep ; 5: 12511, 2015 Jul 27.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26212790

Environmental stimuli have the ability to generate specific representations of the rewards they predict and in so doing alter the selection and performance of reward-seeking actions. The basolateral amygdala participates in this process, but precisely how is unknown. To rectify this, we monitored, in near-real time, basolateral amygdala glutamate concentration changes during a test of the ability of reward-predictive cues to influence reward-seeking actions (Pavlovian-instrumental transfer). Glutamate concentration was found to be transiently elevated around instrumental reward seeking. During the Pavlovian-instrumental transfer test these glutamate transients were time-locked to and correlated with only those actions invigorated by outcome-specific motivational information provided by the reward-predictive stimulus (i.e., actions earning the same specific outcome as predicted by the presented CS). In addition, basolateral amygdala AMPA, but not NMDA glutamate receptor inactivation abolished the selective excitatory influence of reward-predictive cues over reward seeking. These data support [corrected] the hypothesis that transient glutamate release in the BLA can encode the outcome-specific motivational information provided by reward-predictive stimuli.


Amygdala/metabolism , Anticipation, Psychological/physiology , Conditioning, Operant/physiology , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Reward , Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Animals , Choice Behavior/physiology , Cues , Extinction, Psychological/physiology , Male , Neurotransmitter Agents/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Long-Evans
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