神经科学
眶额皮质
基底外侧杏仁核
扁桃形结构
纹状体
计算机科学
心理学
前额叶皮质
认知
多巴胺
作者
Dan C. Li,Niharika M. Dighe,Britton R. Barbee,Elizabeth G. Pitts,Brik Kochoian,Sarah A. Blumenthal,Janet Figueroa,Traci Leong,Shannon L. Gourley
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41593-022-01148-9
摘要
Behavioral flexibility—that is, the ability to deviate from established behavioral sequences—is critical for navigating dynamic environments and requires the durable encoding and retrieval of new memories to guide future choice. The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) supports outcome-guided behaviors. However, the coordinated neural circuitry and cellular mechanisms by which OFC connections sustain flexible learning and memory remain elusive. Here we demonstrate in mice that basolateral amygdala (BLA)→OFC projections bidirectionally control memory formation when familiar behaviors are unexpectedly not rewarded, whereas OFC→dorsomedial striatum (DMS) projections facilitate memory retrieval. OFC neuronal ensembles store a memory trace for newly learned information, which appears to be facilitated by circuit-specific dendritic spine plasticity and neurotrophin signaling within defined BLA–OFC–DMS connections and obstructed by cocaine. Thus, we describe the directional transmission of information within an integrated amygdalo-fronto-striatal circuit across time, whereby novel memories are encoded by BLA→OFC inputs, represented within OFC ensembles and retrieved via OFC→DMS outputs during future choice. To behave flexibly, animals must form new memories and retrieve them later. Li et al. reveal an integrated (molecular-, structural- and circuit-based) system by which the ventral orbitofrontal cortex forms memory for adaptive actions and choice.
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