Valence and salience encoding by parallel circuits from the paraventricular thalamus to the nucleus accumbens

TitleValence and salience encoding by parallel circuits from the paraventricular thalamus to the nucleus accumbens
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsRivera-Irizarry JK, Hamor PU, Rowson SA, Asfouri J, Liu D, Zallar LJ, Garcia AF, Skelly MJane, Pleil KE
JournalbioRxiv
Date Published2023 Jul 03
ISSN2692-8205
Abstract

The anterior and posterior subregions of the paraventricular thalamus (aPVT and pPVT, respectively) play unique roles in learned behaviors, from fear conditioning to alcohol/drug intake, potentially through differentially organized projections to limbic brain regions including the nucleus accumbens medial shell (mNAcSh). Here, we found that the aPVT projects broadly to the mNAcSh and that the aPVT-mNAcSh circuit encodes positive valence, such that in vivo manipulations of the circuit modulated both innately programmed and learned behavioral responses to positively and negatively valenced stimuli, particularly in females. Further, the endogenous activity of aPVT presynaptic terminals in the mNAcSh was greater in response to positively than negatively valenced stimuli, and the probability of synaptic glutamate release from aPVT neurons in the mNAcSh was higher in females than males. In contrast, we found that the pPVT-mNAcSh circuit encodes stimulus salience regardless of valence. While pPVT-mNAcSh circuit inhibition suppressed behavioral responses in both sexes, circuit activation increased behavioral responses to stimuli only in males. Our results point to circuit-specific stimulus feature encoding by parallel PVT-mNAcSh circuits that have sex-dependent biases in organization and function.

DOI10.1101/2023.07.03.547570
Alternate JournalbioRxiv
PubMed ID37461604
PubMed Central IDPMC10349961
Grant ListT32 DA039080 / DA / NIDA NIH HHS / United States