Liu Zheng, Wang Yao, Cai Li, Li Yizhi, Chen Bo, Dong Yan, Huang Yanhua H
Departments of Psychiatry and.
Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15219.
J Neurosci. 2016 Jul 27;36(30):7897-910. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0347-16.2016.
Sleep profoundly affects the emotional and motivational state. In humans and animals, loss of sleep often results in enhanced motivation for reward, which has direct implications for health risks as well as potential benefits. Current study aims at understanding the mechanisms underlying sleep deprivation (SDe)-induced enhancement of reward seeking. We found that after acute SDe, mice had an increase in sucrose seeking and consumption but not food intake, suggesting a selective enhancement of motivation for reward. In the nucleus accumbens (NAc), a key brain region regulating emotional and motivational responses, we observed a decrease in the ratio of the overall excitatory over inhibitory synaptic inputs onto NAc principle neurons after SDe. The shift was partly mediated by reduced glutamatergic transmission of presynaptic origin. Further analysis revealed that there was selective reduction of the glutamate release probability at the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC)-to-NAc synapses, but not those from the hippocampus, thalamus, or the basal lateral amygdala. To reverse this SDe-induced synaptic alteration, we expressed the stabilized step function opsin (SSFO) in the mPFC; optogenetic stimulation of SSFO at mPFC-to-NAc projection terminals persistently enhanced the action potential-dependent glutamate release. Intra-NAc optogenetic stimulation of SSFO selectively at mPFC-to-NAc terminals restored normal sucrose seeking in mice after SDe without affecting food intake. These results highlight the mPFC-to-NAc projection as a key circuit-based target for sleep to regulate reward-motivated behaviors.
Sleep loss, a costly challenge of modern society, has profound physiological and psychological consequences, including altered reward processing of the brain. The current study aims at understanding the mechanisms underlying sleep deprivation-induced enhancement of reward seeking. We identify that the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC)-to-nucleus accumbens (NAc) glutamatergic transmission is selectively weakened following acute sleep deprivation, whose restoration normalizes reward seeking in sleep-deprived mice. These results suggest a possibility of normalizing sleep deprivation-induced abnormal reward seeking by targeting specific neural projections, and they demonstrate the mPFC-to-NAc glutamatergic projection as a key circuit-based target for sleep to regulate reward-motivated behaviors.
睡眠对情绪和动机状态有深远影响。在人类和动物中,睡眠缺失通常会导致对奖励的动机增强,这对健康风险和潜在益处都有直接影响。当前的研究旨在了解睡眠剥夺(SDe)诱导的寻求奖励行为增强背后的机制。我们发现,急性睡眠剥夺后,小鼠对蔗糖的寻求和消耗增加,但食物摄入量没有增加,这表明对奖励的动机有选择性增强。在伏隔核(NAc),一个调节情绪和动机反应的关键脑区,我们观察到睡眠剥夺后,NAc主要神经元上总体兴奋性与抑制性突触输入的比例降低。这种变化部分是由突触前起源的谷氨酸能传递减少介导的。进一步分析表明,内侧前额叶皮质(mPFC)到NAc突触处谷氨酸释放概率有选择性降低,而海马体、丘脑或基底外侧杏仁核的突触处则没有。为了逆转这种睡眠剥夺诱导的突触改变,我们在mPFC中表达了稳定的阶跃函数视蛋白(SSFO);对mPFC到NAc投射终末的SSFO进行光遗传学刺激持续增强了动作电位依赖性谷氨酸释放。在NAc内对mPFC到NAc终末的SSFO进行选择性光遗传学刺激可恢复睡眠剥夺小鼠的正常蔗糖寻求行为,而不影响食物摄入量。这些结果突出了mPFC到NAc投射作为睡眠调节奖励驱动行为的关键基于回路的靶点。
睡眠缺失是现代社会代价高昂的挑战,具有深远的生理和心理后果,包括大脑奖励处理的改变。当前的研究旨在了解睡眠剥夺诱导的寻求奖励行为增强背后的机制。我们发现,急性睡眠剥夺后,内侧前额叶皮质(mPFC)到伏隔核(NAc)的谷氨酸能传递选择性减弱,恢复这种传递可使睡眠剥夺小鼠的寻求奖励行为正常化。这些结果表明,通过靶向特定神经投射来使睡眠剥夺诱导的异常寻求奖励行为正常化是有可能的,并且它们证明了mPFC到NAc的谷氨酸能投射是睡眠调节奖励驱动行为的关键基于回路的靶点。