Literature DB >> 30688488

Basal forebrain chemogenetic inhibition disrupts the superior complex movement control of goal-tracking rats.

Aaron Kucinski1, Youngsoo Kim1, Martin Sarter1.   

Abstract

Sign- and goal-tracking behavior signifies the influence of opposed cognitive-motivational styles, with the former being characterized by a tendency for approaching and contacting reward cues, including a readiness for attending, bottom-up, to salient cues, and a relatively greater vulnerability for developing and maintaining addiction-like behaviors. We previously demonstrated that these styles also impact the cognitive-motor interactions that are taxed during traversal of dynamic surfaces, with goal-trackers (GTs) making less movement errors and falling less frequently than sign-trackers (STs). The present experiment tested the hypothesis that complex movement control in GTs, but not STs, depends on activation of the basal forebrain projection system to telencephalic regions. Chemogenetic inhibition of the basal forebrain increased movement errors and falls in GTs during traversal of a rotating zigzag rod but had no significant effect on the relatively lower performance of STs. Neurochemical evidence confirmed the efficacy of the inhibitory designer receptor exclusively activated by designer drug (DREADD). Administration of clozapine-N-oxide (CNO) had no significant effect in GTs not expressing the DREADD. These results indicate that GTs, but not STs, activate the basal forebrain projection system to mediate their relatively superior ability for complex movement control. STs may also serve as an animal model in research on the role of basal forebrain systems in aging- and Parkinson's disease-associated falls. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30688488      PMCID: PMC6850517          DOI: 10.1037/bne0000290

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Neurosci        ISSN: 0735-7044            Impact factor:   1.912


  65 in total

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6.  Individual variation in the propensity to attribute incentive salience to a food cue: influence of sex.

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Review 7.  Where attention falls: Increased risk of falls from the converging impact of cortical cholinergic and midbrain dopamine loss on striatal function.

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8.  Reducing falls in Parkinson's disease: interactions between donepezil and the 5-HT6 receptor antagonist idalopirdine on falls in a rat model of impaired cognitive control of complex movements.

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9.  Potassium, but not atropine-stimulated cortical acetylcholine efflux, is reduced in aged rats.

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10.  Falls and falls efficacy: the role of sustained attention in older adults.

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  7 in total

1.  Complex Movement Control in a Rat Model of Parkinsonian Falls: Bidirectional Control by Striatal Cholinergic Interneurons.

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2.  Addiction vulnerability and the processing of significant cues: Sign-, but not goal-, tracker perceptual sensitivity relies on cue salience.

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Review 3.  Role of the locus coeruleus and basal forebrain in arousal and attention.

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4.  Reduction of falls in a rat model of PD falls by the M1 PAM TAK-071.

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5.  Characterization of social behavior in young and middle-aged ChAT-IRES-Cre mouse.

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6.  Rescuing the attentional performance of rats with cholinergic losses by the M1 positive allosteric modulator TAK-071.

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Review 7.  Make a Left Turn: Cortico-Striatal Circuitry Mediating the Attentional Control of Complex Movements.

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  7 in total

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