Reward expectation selectively boosts the firing of accumbens D1+ neurons during motivated approach

Kavli Affiliate: Joshua Berke

| Authors: Thomas Faust, Ali Mohebi and Joshua D Berke

| Summary:

The nucleus accumbens (NAc) helps govern motivation to pursue rewards. Two distinct sets of NAc projection neurons – expressing dopamine D1 versus D2 receptors – are thought to promote and suppress motivated behaviors respectively. However, support for this conceptual framework is limited: in particular the spiking patterns of these distinct cell types during motivated behavior have been largely unknown. We monitored identified D1+ and D2+ neurons in the NAc Core, as unrestrained rats performed an operant task in which motivation to initiate work tracks recent reward rate. D1+ neurons preferentially increased firing as rats initiated trials, and fired more when reward expectation was higher. By contrast, D2+ cells preferentially increased firing later in the trial especially in response to reward delivery – a finding not anticipated from current theoretical models. Our results provide new evidence for the specific contribution of NAc D1+ cells to self-initiated approach behavior, and will spur updated models of how we learn from rewards.

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