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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Basal Forebrain Mediates Motivational Recruitment of Attention by Reward-Associated Cues.

Faezeh Tashakori-sabzevarRyan D. Ward

subject

0301 basic medicineBiologyNucleus basalisArousallcsh:RC321-57103 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicinePrefrontal cortexlcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatrybasal forebrainOriginal ResearchBasal forebraincognitive effortGeneral NeuroscienceSubstantia innominataCognitionmedicine.diseaseDiagonal band of Brocainhibitionsustained attentionreward-associated cues030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureSchizophreniaDREADDNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscience

description

The basal forebrain, composed of distributed nuclei, including substantia innominata (SI), nucleus basalis and nucleus of the diagonal band of Broca plays a crucial neuromodulatory role in the brain. In particular, its projections to the prefrontal cortex have been shown to be important in a wide variety of brain processes and functions, including attention, learning and memory, arousal, and decision-making. In the present study, we asked whether the basal forebrain is involved in recruitment of cognitive effort in response to reward-related cues. This interaction between motivation and cognition is critically impacted in psychiatric conditions such as schizophrenia. Using the Designer Receptor Exclusively Activated by Designer Drug (DREADD) technique combined with our recently developed signaled probability sustained attention task (SPSA), which explicitly assays the interaction between motivation and attention, we sought to determine the role of the basal forebrain in this interaction. Rats were stereotaxically injected in the basal forebrain with either hM4D(Gi) (a virus that expresses receptors which silence neurons in the presence of the drug clozapine-N-oxide; CNO) or a control virus and tested in the SPSA. Behaviour of rats during baseline and under saline indicated control by reward probability. In the presence of CNO, differential accuracy of hM4D(Gi) rats on high and low reward-probability trials was abolished. This result occurred despite spared ability of the reward-probability signals to differentially impact choice-response latencies and omissions. These results indicate that the basal forebrain is critical for the motivational recruitment of attention in response to reward-related cues and are consistent with a role for basal forebrain in encoding and transmitting motivational salience of reward-related cues and readying prefrontal circuits for further attentional processing.

10.3389/fnins.2018.00786https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30425617