| Literature DB >> 24122021 |
Eliane Proulx, Matthew Piva, Michael K Tian, Craig D C Bailey, Evelyn K Lambe.
Abstract
Cholinergic modulation of prefrontal cortex is essential for attention. In essence, it focuses the mind on relevant, transient stimuli in support of goal-directed behavior. The excitation of prefrontal layer VI neurons through nicotinic acetylcholine receptors optimizes local and top-down control of attention. Layer VI of prefrontal cortex is the origin of a dense feedback projection to the thalamus and is one of only a handful of brain regions that express the α5 nicotinic receptor subunit, encoded by the gene chrna5. This accessory nicotinic receptor subunit alters the properties of high-affinity nicotinic receptors in layer VI pyramidal neurons in both development and adulthood. Studies investigating the consequences of genetic deletion of α5, as well as other disruptions to nicotinic receptors, find attention deficits together with altered cholinergic excitation of layer VI neurons and aberrant neuronal morphology. Nicotinic receptors in prefrontal layer VI neurons play an essential role in focusing attention under challenging circumstances. In this regard, they do not act in isolation, but rather in concert with cholinergic receptors in other parts of prefrontal circuitry. This review urges an intensification of focus on the cellular mechanisms and plasticity of prefrontal attention circuitry. Disruptions in attention are one of the greatest contributing factors to disease burden in psychiatric and neurological disorders, and enhancing attention may require different approaches in the normal and disordered prefrontal cortex.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24122021 PMCID: PMC3949016 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-013-1481-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Fig. 1a The medial prefrontal cortex shown in gray receives cholinergic innervation from the basal forebrain. Figure adapted from Woolf [25] and Paxinos and Franklin [277] and is based on findings from Rye et al., Luiten et al., and Gaykema et al. [23, 160, 278]. The dashed line indicates the approximate location of the coronal section shown below. b Coronal brain section showing the subregions of rodent medial prefrontal cortex (in gray). Cg cingulate cortex, DB diagonal band, IL infralimbic cortex, MS medial septal nucleus, NB nucleus basalis, PFC prefrontal cortex, PL prelimbic cortex
Fig. 2Subunit composition and layout of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunits in layer VI of medial prefrontal cortex. a Schematics showing three possible compositions of α4β2* nicotinic receptors within layer VI neurons of medial prefrontal cortex. Figure adapted from McKay et al. [279]. b Photomicrograph of mouse medial prefrontal cortex immunostained for YFP-tagged nicotinic acetylcholine receptor α4 subunits, putatively expressed in α4β2*-containing cells as shown at lower resolution by Marks and colleagues [93]. White matter on the right and the medial pial surface is on the left; adapted from Alves et al. [92]. Scale bar 200 μm. c In situ hybridization showing a dense band of α5 nicotinic subunit mRNA expression in layer VI of the medial prefrontal cortex; adapted from Wada et al. [86]
Fig. 3Acetylcholine (ACh) excites labeled corticothalamic neurons in layer VI of medial prefrontal cortex. a Retrograde labeling of corticothalamic neurons through in vivo stereotaxic surgery to inject rhodamine microspheres into the medial dorsal thalamus. b Prominent retrograde labeling of layer VI neurons in a coronal prefrontal brain slice. The asterisk marks the location of a patch pipette for electrophysiologcal recordings. Scale bar 240 μm. Figure adapted from Kassam et al. [36]. c A high-magnification view of a labeled pyramidal cell body. Scale bar 20 μm. Figure adapted from Kassam et al. [36]. d Schematic showing the closed and open states of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. e A retrograde-labeled corticothalamic neuron in layer VI of medial prefrontal cortex responds to acetylcholine in (1) current clamp and (2) voltage clamp. Figure adapted from Kassam et al. [36]
Fig. 4Under challenging conditions, mice lacking the nicotinic α5 subunit (α5−/−) respond with decreased accuracy relative to wild-type (WT) mice in the 5-choice serial reaction time task (5-CSRTT). a Schematic of the operant chamber for the 5-CSRTT. b Four typical responses of mice performing the 5-CSRTT. From left to right: the correct response, the incorrect response, an omission, and a premature response. Figure adapted from Dalley et al. [280]. c Nicotinic receptor α5−/− mice perform significantly worse than wild-type controls in the 5-CSRTT when stimulus duration is brief. Figure adapted from Bailey et al. [37]
Fig. 5Plasticity between nicotinic and muscarinic acetylcholine (ACh) receptors in layer VI neurons of medial prefrontal cortex. Typical responses in layer VI pyramidal neurons are highly driven by nicotinic receptors, whereas muscarinic effects are less prominent. In knockout mice with decreased nicotinic receptor function, muscarinic responses are enhanced. This compensatory upregulation in muscarinic receptor function is apparent in α5−/− mice and very pronounced in β2−/− mice. Figure summarizing results from Tian et al. [59]
Fig. 6The morphology of layer VI neurons in medial prefrontal cortex differs between wild-type and α5−/− mice. In adult wild-type mice, there is a roughly equal distribution of layer VI pyramidal neurons that have long apical dendrites that terminate at the pial surface and those that have short apical dendrites that terminate within the mid-layers of the medial prefrontal cortex. In contrast, layer VI neurons of α5−/− mice show a preponderance of neurons with long apical dendrites. In this sense, it could be said the layer VI neurons of α5−/− mice retain a developmental phenotype in the pattern of their apical dendritic morphology. In young mice of both genotypes, layer VI neurons have only long apical dendrites. Figure adapted from Bailey et al. [63]. Of note, these morphological changes can be recapitulated in wild-type mice by chronic in vivo nicotine treatment during development [281], likely mediated through desensitization of nicotinic receptors [281]
Categories of differences between WT and α5−/− mice
| Effects | WT | α5−/− |
|---|---|---|
| Neuropharmacology in layer VI pyramidal cells [ | ||
| ACh-elicited nicotinic receptor currents (1 mM) | 40 ± 5 pA | 14 ± 1 pA* |
| Nicotine-elicited nicotinic receptor currents (300 nM) | 16 ± 2 pA | 6 ± 1 pA* |
| Desensitization (% decrease) of ACh response after nicotine | 36 ± 4 % | 73 ± 4 %* |
| ACh-elicited muscarinic depolarization from rest | 2.9 ± 0.5 mV | 6.5 ± 1.3 mV* |
| ACh-elicited muscarinic increase in spiking frequency in excited state | 309 ± 23 % | 462 ± 65 %* |
| Developmental changes in ACh-induced currents | Peak in young mice | No change* |
| Dendritic morphology of layer VI pyramidal cells [ | ||
| Young mice: % apical dendrites extending to the pial surface | 82 % | 92 % |
| Adult mice: % apical dendrites extending to the pial surface | 45 % | 92 %* |
| Attention behavior [ | ||
| Performance accuracy on non-demanding attention tasks | 98 ± 1 % | 97 ± 1 % |
| Performance accuracy on demanding attention tasks | 63 ± 3 % | 54 ± 3 %* |
| Systemic nicotine changes attentional accuracy on demanding tasks | −5 ± 1 %** | −1 ± 4 % |
Data are shown as mean ± SEM (where appropriate)
* Indicates a statistically significant difference from WT with P < 0.05
** Indicates a statistically significant change from baseline with P < 0.05
Nicotinic receptor effects on attention
| Manipulation | Species | Task | Effects on attention | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| α5 subunit KO | Mice | 5-CSRTT | ↓ | [ |
| β2 subunit KO | Mice | 5-CSRTT | ↓ | [ |
| α7 subunit KO | Mice | 5-CSRTT | ↓ | [ |
| Mice | 5-CSRTT | – | [ | |
|
| ||||
| α5 subunit | Humans | Selective and sustained attention (CPT) | ↓ | [ |
| n-back/CPT | ↓ | [ | ||
| α4 subunit | Humans | ADHD inattentive symptoms | ↓ | [ |
| Cued visual search task | ↓ | [ | ||
| Selective and sustained attention (CPT) | ↓ | [ | ||
| Multiple object tracking and visual search | ↓ | [ | ||
| β2 subunit | Humans | Selective attention (CPT) | ↓ | [ |
| α7 subunit | Humans | Sustained attention (CPT) | ↑ in smokers ↓ in nonsmokers | [ |
|
| ||||
| Basal forebrain lesions | Rats | 5-CSRTT | ↓ | [ |
| Nucleus basalis of Meynert lesions | Rats | 5-CSRTT | ↓ | [ |
| mPFC lesions | Rats | 5-CSRTT | ↓ | [ |
| mPFC lesions | Rats | Attentional set-shifting |
| [ |
| Lesions of PFC cholinergic fibers | Rats | 5-CSRTT |
| [ |
| Lesions of PFC cholinergic fibers | Rats | SAT/dSAT |
| [ |
|
| ||||
|
| ||||
| Nicotine | Monkeys | Covert orienting | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine | Monkeys | DMTS-D | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine | Rats | 5-CSRTT | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine | Rats | 5-CSRTT | – | [ |
| Nicotine | Rats | Stimulus detection | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine | Rats | 5-CSRTT | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine | Rats (two strains) | 5-CSRTT | ↑ in Sprague–Dawley –in Lister | [ |
| Nicotine | Rats | 5-CSRTT | –(acute), ↑ (chronic) | [ |
| Nicotine (local to HIP or mPFC) | Rats | 5-CSRTT | –(HIP), ↑ (mPFC) | [ |
| Nicotine | Mice | 5-CSRTT | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine (local to mPFC) | Rats | 3-CSRTT | ↑ (mPFC) | [ |
| Nicotine | Rats | 5-CSRTT | ↑ (acute and chronic) | [ |
| Nicotine | Mice (three strains) | 5-CSRTT | –(acute) ↑ (chronic) in all strains | [ |
| Nicotine | Mice | 5-CSRTT | ↓ | [ |
| Nicotine | Rats | SAT | ↓ | [ |
| Nicotine | Rats | Attention set-shifting | ↑ (acute and sub-chronic) | [ |
| Nicotine | Mice | 5-CSRTT | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine (tablets) | Humans | Rapid info processing | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine (gum) | Humans | Two-letter/digit recall | ↓ | [ |
| Nicotine (subcutaneous) | Humans | Reaction time | – | [ |
| Nicotine (subcutaneous) | Humans | Digit recall | ↓ | [ |
| Nicotine (patch) | Humans | POMS/CPT/Digit recall | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine (gum) | Humans | Flight simulator | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine (patch) | Humans | Digit recall | – | [ |
| Nicotine (patch) | Humans | Covert orienting | – | [ |
| Nicotine (subcutaneous) | Humans | N-back | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine (gum) | Humans | ANT | – | [ |
| Nicotine (gum) | Humans | Cue target detection | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine (gum) | Humans | Discrimination (Posner-type) | – | [ |
| Nicotine (patch) | Humans | Stroop | – | [ |
| Nicotine (gum) | Humans | Discrimination (Posner-type) | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine (patch) | Humans | Multiple tasks | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine (gum) | Humans | RVIP | ↑ | [ |
| Nicotine (patch) | Humans | Stroop/ANT | ↑ (Stroop), ↓ (ANT) | [ |
| Nicotine (intranasal) | Humans | CPT | ↑ | [ |
|
| ||||
| ABT-418/ABT-089 | Rats | DMTS-D | ↑ | [ |
| SIB-1533A | Rats | 5-CSRTT | – | [ |
| Dizocilpine then SIB-1533A | Rats | 5-CSRTT | ↓ (diz), attenuation with SIB | [ |
| SIB-1533A | Monkeys | DMTS-D | ↑ | [ |
| Epibatidine/ABT-418/isoarecolone/AR-R 17779 | Rats | 5-CSRTT | ↑ (epi, ABT, iso), –(AR-R) | [ |
| ABT-594/ABT-582941 | Monkeys | DMTS-D | ↑ (ABT-594, ABT-582941) | [ |
| R3487/galanthamine | Rats | Signal detection | ↑ (R3487), –(gal) | [ |
| S 38232 | Rats | SAT/dSAT | ↑ | [ |
| ABT-594 | Rats | 5-CSRTT | ↑ | [ |
| Dizocilpine/scopolamine then sazetidine-A | Rats | Signal detection | ↓ (diz, sco), attenuation with saz | [ |
| ABT-418 | Mouse | 5-CSRTT | ↑ | [ |
| PNU 282987 | Mouse | 5-CSRTT | – | [ |
|
| ||||
| Mecamylamine | Rats | 5-CSRTT | ↓ | [ |
| Mecamylamine/hexamethonium | Rats | 5-CSRTT | ↓ (mec), –(hex) | [ |
| Mecamylamine | Rats | Signal detection | ↓ | [ |
| Mecamylamine | Mice | 5-CSRTT | ↓ (mec) in three strains | [ |
| Mecamylamine | Humans | Digit vigilance, RVIP | –(mec) | [ |
|
| ||||
| Physostigmine | Rats | 5-CSRTT | – | [ |
| Donepezil | Humans | Flight simulator | ↑ | [ |
| Donepezil | Humans | Anti-cueing | ↑ (voluntary attention only) | [ |
|
| ||||
| Hemicholinium | Rats | 5-CSRTT | ↓ | [ |
Fig. 7A concentration of nicotine similar to that seen in the blood of smokers markedly reduces subsequent nicotinic receptor-mediated responses to acetylcholine (ACh). a Schematic of the acetylcholine response, nicotine response, and acetylcholine response following receptor desensitization by nicotine. b Representative whole-cell recordings of a layer VI pyramidal neurons showing: (1) an initial response to ACh, (2) response to nicotine, and (3) response to ACh following desensitization by nicotine. Figure adapted from Bailey et al. [37]