ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE THAT A SUBSET OF MIDBRAIN DOPAMINE NEURONS INTEGRATE THE REWARD SIGNAL INDUCED BY ELECTRICAL-STIMULATION OF THE POSTERIOR MESENCEPHALON
J. Moisan et Pp. Rompre, ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE THAT A SUBSET OF MIDBRAIN DOPAMINE NEURONS INTEGRATE THE REWARD SIGNAL INDUCED BY ELECTRICAL-STIMULATION OF THE POSTERIOR MESENCEPHALON, Brain research, 786(1-2), 1998, pp. 143-152
This study was aimed at determining whether midbrain dopamine (DA) neu
rons are trans-synaptically activated by rewarding electrical stimulat
ion applied near the midline in the posterior mesencephalon (PM), and
in the affirmative, whether the increase in firing was proportional to
the rewarding effectiveness of the stimulation. Experiments were perf
ormed on male Long-Evans rats trained to lever press to obtain 400 ms
trains of cathodal rectangular pulses. Following the training period,
curves relating the rates of responding to the stimulation frequencies
were determined at two current intensities and reward thresholds were
calculated for each animal. Each animal was then anesthetized with ur
ethane (1.2 g/kg, i.p.) and firing rate of DA neurons were recorded be
fore, during, and after each of 50 trains (1 train/3 s) of stimulation
to the PM using stimulation parameters that either sustained near thr
eshold responding (rewarding), or failed to sustain responding (non-re
warding), in the behavioral tests. A total of 24 DA cells were recorde
d from 13 behaviorally trained animals, and of these, 17 (71%) respond
ed to rewarding stimulation by an increase in firing, five (21%) were
unresponsive and two (8%) were inhibited. In 12 of the 17 cells that w
ere activated, the increase in firing was proportional to the rewardin
g effectiveness of the stimulation rather than the total strength of t
he stimulation These results provide evidence that a subset of midbrai
n DA neurons are trans-synaptically activated by rewarding PM stimulat
ion and constitute a second, or subsequent, stage of the reward-releva
nt pathway that integrates the PM reward signal. (C) 1998 Elsevier Sci
ence B.V.