Literature DB >> 33729155

Mechanism for differential recruitment of orbitostriatal transmission during actions and outcomes following chronic alcohol exposure.

Rafael Renteria1, Christian Cazares2, Emily T Baltz2, Drew C Schreiner1, Ege A Yalcinbas2, Thomas Steinkellner3, Thomas S Hnasko2,3,4, Christina M Gremel1,2.   

Abstract

Psychiatric disease often produces symptoms that have divergent effects on neural activity. For example, in drug dependence, dysfunctional value-based decision-making and compulsive-like actions have been linked to hypo- and hyperactivity of orbital frontal cortex (OFC)-basal ganglia circuits, respectively; however, the underlying mechanisms are unknown. Here we show that alcohol-exposed mice have enhanced activity in OFC terminals in dorsal striatum (OFC-DS) associated with actions, but reduced activity of the same terminals during periods of outcome retrieval, corresponding with a loss of outcome control over decision-making. Disrupted OFC-DS terminal activity was due to a dysfunction of dopamine-type 1 receptors on spiny projection neurons (D1R SPNs) that resulted in increased retrograde endocannabinoid signaling at OFC-D1R SPN synapses reducing OFC-DS transmission. Blocking CB1 receptors restored OFC-DS activity in vivo and rescued outcome-based control over decision-making. These findings demonstrate a circuit-, synapse-, and computation-specific mechanism gating OFC activity in alcohol-exposed mice.
© 2021, Renteria et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  alcohol; direct pathway; dopamine receptor; endocannabinoid; habits; mouse; neuroscience; orbital frontal cortex

Year:  2021        PMID: 33729155      PMCID: PMC8016477          DOI: 10.7554/eLife.67065

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Elife        ISSN: 2050-084X            Impact factor:   8.140


  93 in total

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Journal:  Annu Rev Neurosci       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 12.449

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