Volume 16, Number 10,
Issue of May 15, 1996
pp. 3511-3520
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Mesencephalic Substrate of Reward: Axonal Connections
Received Nov. 7, 1995; revised Feb. 29, 1996; accepted March 4, 1996.
Sandra M. Boye1 and
Pierre-Paul Rompré2
1 Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology,
Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada, and
2 Centre de Recherche, Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur
et Département de Psychiatrie, Université de
Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada
The behavioral version of the collision technique was used to study
the existence of axonal linkage between reward-relevant sites in the
ventral tegmental area (VTA) and posterior mesencephalon (PM) in six
rats trained to self-administer trains of electrical brain stimulation.
The combined use of fixed and moveable stimulation electrodes allowed
us to carry out collision tests at a total of 46 different combinations
of VTA-PM sites, and collision-like effects were observed at 24 of
these. Stimulation of the VTA and the most caudal PM sites generally
resulted in collision curves that were characterized by a single
increase in paired-pulse effectiveness (E-values), whereas recovery in
those collision curves obtained from stimulation of the VTA and more
rostral PM sites was generally slower, and often characterized by a
double rise. Despite little variability in interelectrode distances
(1.0-3.8 mm), collision intervals varied widely, ranging from 1.5 to
7.3 msec. Recovery from refractoriness (initial 25%) was also
estimated and ranged from 0.7 to 1.0 msec, resulting in conduction-time
estimates of 0.7-6.3 msec. The lack of correspondence between
interelectrode distances and conduction times suggests the presence of
axonal branching. Results of this study constitute the first behavioral
evidence of a reward-relevant axonal link between the VTA and the PM.
In addition, the finding that in one animal the anterior electrode was
located within the posterior portion of the lateral hypothalamus (LH)
suggests that the reward-relevant axonal bundle linking the LH and VTA
may extend as far back as the caudal regions of the PM.
Key words:
collision;
refractory periods;
reward;
self-stimulation;
ventral tegmental area;
posterior mesencephalon