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Researchers reveal how nucleus accumbens mediates positive and negative motivational valence

11.14.22 | Chinese Academy of Sciences Headquarters

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Reward-seeking and threat avoidance are critical for survival. Pursuing enjoyable things triggers the release of dopamine in the brain, making people feel pleasure. On the contrary, people subconsciously avoid unpleasant feelings such as hunger, nausea and pain in order to avoid risk and greatly reduce the possibility of harm.

Previous studies have proved that the nucleus accumbens (NAc) plays an important role in regulating drug reward, feeding, social interaction, pain and instrumental learning.

Recently, a research group led by Prof. ZHU Yingjie from the Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology (SIAT) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) has revealed the mechanism of NAc in mediating positive and negative motivational valence.

The study was published in Nature Communications .

The researchers designed a series of experiments to elucidate this mechanism. They found two neuron subgroups in NAc: NAc BLA (BLA, basolateral amygdala) neurons and NAc PVT (PVT, paraventricular thalamic) neurons.

NAc BLA neurons receive BLA inputs and project to VTA GABA (VTA, ventral tegmental area) neurons and LH Glu (LH, lateral hypothalamus) neurons to control reward-seeking behavior. NAc PVT input neurons receive PVT inputs, and project to LH GABA neurons to promote aversion. These results provide an input-output connectivity framework for understanding the role of NAc subcircuits in mediating reward and aversion.

"Our findings solved a long-standing puzzle of why distinct glutamatergic inputs to NAc produce opposite motivational valence and highlight the importance of input-output connectivity when dissecting NAc circuitry," said Prof. ZHU.

The traditional view is that the NAc is the reward center of the brain and the input from other brain regions to the NAc carries reward information. "This work raises an important question, which is why activating the input from the PVT and activating the input from other brain regions to the NAc produce completely different behaviors," commented Prof. CHEN Xiaoke from Stanford University.

"The results of this work provide the neural circuitry basis for BLA-NAc and PVT-NAc glutamate projection in the regulation of reward and aversion behavior, highlighting the importance of different inputs to NAc neurons and the subsets of these neurons in the limbic system in dopamine," commented Prof. LIU Xing from Fudan University.

Nature Communications

10.1038/s41467-022-33843-3

Reward and aversion processing by input-defined parallel nucleus accumbens circuits in mice

21-Oct-2022

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Contact Information

ZHANG Xiaomin
Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
xm.zhang@siat.ac.cn

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
Chinese Academy of Sciences Headquarters. (2022, November 14). Researchers reveal how nucleus accumbens mediates positive and negative motivational valence. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LVDMGR5L/researchers-reveal-how-nucleus-accumbens-mediates-positive-and-negative-motivational-valence.html
MLA:
"Researchers reveal how nucleus accumbens mediates positive and negative motivational valence." Brightsurf News, Nov. 14 2022, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LVDMGR5L/researchers-reveal-how-nucleus-accumbens-mediates-positive-and-negative-motivational-valence.html.