A corticoamygdalar pathway controls reward devaluation and depression using dynamic inhibition code.

Neuron

National Institute of Biological Sciences, Beijing 102206, China; Chinese Institute for Brain Research, Beijing 102206, China; Tsinghua Institute of Multidisciplinary Biomedical Research (TIMBR), Beijing 102206, China; Research Unit of Medical Neurobiology, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing 100005, China; New Cornerstone Science Laboratory, Shenzhen 518054, China; Beijing Tiantan Hospital, 100070 Beijing, China. Electronic address:

Published: December 2023

Reward devaluation adaptively controls reward intake. It remains unclear how cortical circuits causally encode reward devaluation in healthy and depressed states. Here, we show that the neural pathway from the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) to the basolateral amygdala (BLA) employs a dynamic inhibition code to control reward devaluation and depression. Fiber photometry and imaging of ACC pyramidal neurons reveal reward-induced inhibition, which weakens during satiation and becomes further attenuated in depression mouse models. Ablating or inhibiting these neurons desensitizes reward devaluation, causes reward intake increase and ultimate obesity, and ameliorates depression, whereas activating the cells sensitizes reward devaluation, suppresses reward consumption, and produces depression-like behaviors. Among various ACC neuron subpopulations, the BLA-projecting subset bidirectionally regulates reward devaluation and depression-like behaviors. Our study thus uncovers a corticoamygdalar circuit that encodes reward devaluation via blunted inhibition and suggests that enhancing inhibition within this circuit may offer a therapeutic approach for treating depression.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2023.08.022DOI Listing

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