| Literature DB >> 29081007 |
Valeria Oliva1,2,3, Emilio Cartoni4, Emanuele Claudio Latagliata5, Stefano Puglisi-Allegra5, Gianluca Baldassarre4.
Abstract
Extinction of Pavlovian conditioning is a complex process that involves brain regions such as the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), the amygdala and the locus coeruleus. In particular, noradrenaline (NA) coming from the locus coeruleus has been recently shown to play a different role in two subregions of the mPFC, the prelimbic (PL) and the infralimbic (IL) regions. How these regions interact in conditioning and subsequent extinction is an open issue. We studied these processes using two approaches: computational modelling and NA manipulation in a conditioned place preference paradigm (CPP) in mice. In the computational model, NA in PL and IL causes inputs arriving to these regions to be amplified, thus allowing them to modulate learning processes in amygdala. The model reproduces results from studies involving depletion of NA from PL, IL, or both in CPP. In addition, we simulated new experiments of NA manipulations in mPFC, making predictions on the possible results. We searched the parameters of the model and tested the robustness of the predictions by performing a sensitivity analysis. We also present an empirical experiment where, in accord with the model, a double depletion of NA from both PL and IL in CPP with amphetamine impairs extinction. Overall the proposed model, supported by anatomical, physiological, and behavioural data, explains the differential role of NA in PL and IL and opens up the possibility to understand extinction mechanisms more in depth and hence to aid the development of treatments for disorders such as addiction.Entities:
Keywords: Amygdala; Conditioned place preference; Extinction; Leaky neurons; Medial prefrontal cortex; Noradrenaline
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29081007 PMCID: PMC5869906 DOI: 10.1007/s00429-017-1533-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Struct Funct ISSN: 1863-2653 Impact factor: 3.270
Fig. 1The model architecture is formed by these components: the locus coeruleus (LC), the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), which comprises the infralimbic (IL) and the prelimbic (PL) regions, and the amygdala (Amg), which comprises the lateral amygdala (LA), divided into two subpopulations, the basal amygdala divided into two subpopulations (BAe and BAf), the central amygdala (CEA), the dorsal intercalated cell mass (ITCd), and the ventral intercalated cell mass (ITCv). The model receives four different external inputs: the occurrence of US (US), the non-occurrence of US (noUS) and two stimuli (Chamber A, Chamber B) representing the two chambers of the CPP apparatus. Connections between structures are noradrenergic (NA), glutamatergic (Glut) or GABAergic (GABA). Glutamatergic connections can be either plastic (Glut, learning) or fixed (Glut)
Bibliographical references supporting the existence of the connections forming the architecture of the model
| Connection | References |
|---|---|
| PL to ITCd |
Vertes ( |
| IL to ITCv |
Vertes ( |
| LA to BAf |
Pare and Duvarci ( |
| LA to ITCd |
Pare and Duvarci ( |
| BAe to ITCv |
Amano et al. ( |
| BAf to CEA |
Pare and Duvarci ( |
| ITCd to ITCv |
Pare and Duvarci ( |
| ITCv to CEA |
Pare and Duvarci ( |
| BA to GABA in PL |
Gabbott et al. ( |
| IL to BAe |
Vertes ( |
Simulated CPP protocol used to test the model. Some trials are repeated twice with presentation of chamber A and B (see the main text)
| Phase | Number of trials | Inputs |
|---|---|---|
| Conditioning training | 4 | Chamber A + US + NA |
| Conditioning training | 4 | Chamber B |
| Conditioning test | 1 | Chamber A + noUS + NA |
| Conditioning test | 1 | Chamber B |
| Extinction training | 14 | Chamber A + noUS + NA |
| Extinction training | 14 | Chamber B |
| Reinstatement | 1 | US + NA |
| Reinstatement test | 1 | Chamber A + noUS + NA |
| Reinstatement test | 1 | Chamber B |
Fig. 3Example of inputs and the consequent activation of the model neuronal populations in a typical simulated control simulation. Red lines indicate the beginning of a test phase, the blue line indicates the beginning of the extinction phase and the black line indicates the beginning of the reinstatement phase. C1 is chamber A, C2 is chamber B, LA1 is the population of LA receiving C1 as input, LA2 is the population of LA receiving C2 as input
Fig. 2Strength of the model connection weights after a conditioning and b extinction. Thicker lines represent strengthened connections
Fig. 4Weights dynamics during a typical simulation of the control condition. Red lines indicate the beginning of a test phase, the blue line indicates the beginning of the extinction phase and the black line indicates the beginning of the reinstatement phase
Experimental manipulations used in the sensitivity analysis. The first four experiments (first four rows) were used to search the parameters of the model, whereas the last two, related to the model predictions, were tested for their robustness with respect to the found model parameters. The fifth row refers to the result empirically tested here (also this result was obtained with the model parameters found with the sensitivity analysis)
| Treatment | Result | References |
|---|---|---|
| NA depletion from PL during extinction training | Faster extinction |
Latagliata et al. ( |
| NA depletion from IL during extinction phase | Extinction impaired |
Latagliata et al. ( |
|
| Faster extinction | Preliminary results Latagliata ( |
| IL inactivation during the second part of extinction phase | Normal extinction |
Do-Monte et al. ( |
|
| Extinction slowed | Prediction to be tested in a future experiment |
| Addition of NA in PL during the first day of extinction phase | Extinction slowed | Prediction to be tested in a future experiment |
| NA depletion from PL and IL | Extinction impaired | Verified with experiment presented in this paper |
Fig. 5The figure shows how the model behaves during four simulated manipulations plus the control (no manipulation) in 1 day of conditioning test (day 0), 14 days of extinction (day 1–14), and a final restatement test (day 15). The blue curve indicates the preference for chamber A, while the green curve shows the preference for chamber B. The y-axis represents the time spent in each chamber. The red line represents a threshold below which we consider the behaviour extinguished. Note that for all the experiments shown we have empirical data only for conditioning and extinction. The presence or absence of reinstatement can, therefore, be considered another prediction of the model
Fig. 6The figure shows an example of the model behaviour, with respect to the two predictions it produced, with a sample of parameters found by the sensitivity analysis. For both conditions related to the two predictions, extinction of the preference for one chamber is slowed compared to the control group. Axes are defined as in Fig. 5
Fig. 7Effects of selective NA depletion in PL and IL prefrontal cortices on expression and daily extinction trials of an acquired conditioned place preference (CPP) induced by 2.5 mg/Kg of amphetamine. Time spent in the centre, paired and unpaired chamber during pretest, test, re-test and non-confined extinction trials in animals assigned to Sham and NA-depleted groups. All data are expressed as mean (sec.) time spent in center, paired and unpaired chambers. The symbols * and ** indicate the statistical significance of the preference for the paired chamber compared to the unpaired one (*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01)
Ranges of the parameters (minimum and maximum values) of the models that the sensitivity analysis found to satisfy all the required empirical constraints
| Parameter | Meaning | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed weights | ||
| CS1–LA | Connection weight from CS to LA | 0.4–2 |
| CS2–LA | Connection weight from CS1 to LA | 0.4–2 |
| BAf–CEA | Connection weight from BAf to CEA | 0.6–2 |
| BAe–PL | Connection weight from BAe to PL | 0.01–1.9 |
| ITCd–ITCv | Connection weight from ITCd to ITCv | 0.2–2 |
| ITCv–CEA | Connection weight from ITCv to CEA | 0.2–2 |
| US–BAf | Connection weight from US to BAf | 0.2–2 |
| noUS–BAe | Connection weight from noUS to BAe | 0.4–1.9 |
| US–PL | Connection weight from US to PL | 0.02–2 |
| noUS–IL | Connection weight from noUS to IL | 0.01–1.9 |
| NA–IL | Connection weight from LC to IL | 0.02–2 |
| NA–PL | Connection weight from LC to PL | 0.02–2 |
| Initial values for learning weights | ||
| LA–BAf | Connection weight from LA to BAf | 0.01–0.2 |
| LA1–BAf | Connection weight from LA1 to BAf | 0.01–0.2 |
| PL–ITCd | Connection weight from PL to ITCd | 0.01–2 |
| IL–ITCv | Connection weight from IL to ITCv | 0.01–2 |
| IL–BAe | Connection weight from IL to BAe | 0.01–1 |
| LA–ITCd | Connection weight from LA to ITCd | 0.01–0.2 |
| BAe–ITCv | Connection weight from BAe to ITCv | 0.01–0.2 |
| Parameters for plasticity | ||
| | Baseline for PL and IL activation | 0.1–0.6 |
| | Size of additive effect of NA | 0.01–2 |
| | Threshold for connection from LA to ITCd | 0.3–1 |
| | Threshold for connection from LA to BA | 0.1–0.6 |
| | Threshold for connection from BA to ITCv | 0.02–0.4 |
| | Threshold for connection from PL to ITCd | 0.01–1 |
| | Threshold for connection from IL to ITCv | 0.1–1 |
| | Learning rate of connection from LA to ITCd | 0.01–1 |
| | Learning rate of connection from LA to BA | 0.01–1 |
| | Learning rate of connection from BA to ITCv | 0.02–0.9 |
| | Learning rate of connection from PL to ITCd | 0.01–1 |
| | Learning rate of connection from IL to ITCv | 0.01–1 |