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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 1, 2002, 22(1):324-337
Cellular Mechanisms of Infralimbic and Prelimbic Prefrontal
Cortical Inhibition and Dopaminergic Modulation of Basolateral Amygdala
Neurons In Vivo
J. Amiel
Rosenkranz1 and
Anthony A.
Grace1, 2
Departments of 1 Neuroscience and
2 Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania 15260
The basolateral amygdala (BLA) is believed to be involved in
schizophrenia, depression, and other disorders that display affective components. The neuronal activity of the BLA, and BLA-mediated affective behaviors, are driven by sensory stimuli transmitted in part
from sensory association cortical regions. These same behaviors may be
regulated by prefrontal cortical (PFC) inputs to the BLA. However, it
is unclear how two sets of glutamatergic inputs to the BLA can impose
opposing actions on BLA-mediated behaviors; specifically, it is unclear
how PFC inputs exert inhibitory actions over BLA projection neurons.
Dopamine (DA) receptor activation enhances BLA-mediated behaviors.
Although we have demonstrated that DA suppresses medial PFC
inputs to the BLA and enhances sensory cortical inputs, the precise
cellular mechanisms for its actions are unknown. In this study we use
in vivo intracellular recordings to determine the means
by which glutamatergic inputs from the PFC inhibit BLA projection
neurons, contrast that with glutamatergic inputs from the association
sensory cortex (Te3) that drive BLA projection neurons, and examine the
effects of DA receptor activation on neuronal excitability, spontaneous
postsynaptic potentials (PSPs), and PFC-evoked PSPs. We found that PFC
stimulation inhibits BLA projection neurons by three mechanisms:
chloride-mediated hyperpolarization, a persistent decrease in neuronal
input resistance, and shunting of PSPs; all effects are possibly
attributable to recruitment of inhibitory interneurons. DA
receptor activation enhanced neuronal input resistance by a
postsynaptic mechanism (via DA D2 receptors), suppressed spontaneously
occurring and PFC-evoked PSPs (via DA D1 receptors), and enhanced
Te3-evoked PSPs.
Key words:
dopamine; basolateral amygdala; prefrontal cortex; sensory association cortex; Te3; in vivo
intracellular
Copyright © 2002 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/02/221324-14$05.00/0
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