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Articles, Systems/Circuits

Association with Reward Negatively Modulates Short Latency Phasic Conditioned Responses of Dorsal Raphe Nucleus Neurons in Freely Moving Rats

Yuhong Li, Neil Dalphin and Brian I. Hyland
Journal of Neuroscience 13 March 2013, 33 (11) 5065-5078; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5679-12.2013
Yuhong Li
Department of Physiology, School of Medical Sciences, and Brain Health Research Centre, University of Otago, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand
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Neil Dalphin
Department of Physiology, School of Medical Sciences, and Brain Health Research Centre, University of Otago, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand
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Brian I. Hyland
Department of Physiology, School of Medical Sciences, and Brain Health Research Centre, University of Otago, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand
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Abstract

The dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) is implicated in mood regulation, control of impulsive behavior, and in processing aversive and reward-related signals. DRN neurons show phasic responses to sensory stimuli, but whether association with reward modulates these responses is unknown. We recorded DRN neurons from rats in a contextual conditioned approach paradigm in which an auditory cue was either followed or not followed by reward, depending on a global context signal. Conditioned approach (licking) occurred after cues in the reward context, but was suppressed in the no-reward context. Many DRN neurons showed short-latency phasic activations in response to the cues. There was striking contextual bias, with more and stronger excitations in the no-reward context than in the reward context. Therefore, DRN activity scaled inversely with cue salience and with the probability of subsequent conditioned approach. Tonic changes were similarly discriminatory, with increases being dominant after cues in the no-reward context, when licking was suppressed, and tonic decreases in rate dominant after reward-predictive cues during expression of conditioned licking. Phasic and tonic DRN responses thus provide signals of consistent valence but over different timescales. The tonic changes in activity are consistent with previous data and hypotheses relating DRN activity to response suppression and impulse control. Phasic responses could contribute to this via online modulation of attention allocation through projections to sensory-processing regions.

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The Journal of Neuroscience: 33 (11)
Journal of Neuroscience
Vol. 33, Issue 11
13 Mar 2013
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Association with Reward Negatively Modulates Short Latency Phasic Conditioned Responses of Dorsal Raphe Nucleus Neurons in Freely Moving Rats
Yuhong Li, Neil Dalphin, Brian I. Hyland
Journal of Neuroscience 13 March 2013, 33 (11) 5065-5078; DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5679-12.2013

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Association with Reward Negatively Modulates Short Latency Phasic Conditioned Responses of Dorsal Raphe Nucleus Neurons in Freely Moving Rats
Yuhong Li, Neil Dalphin, Brian I. Hyland
Journal of Neuroscience 13 March 2013, 33 (11) 5065-5078; DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5679-12.2013
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