BiologyeLife
Reward contingency gates selective cholinergic suppression of amygdala neurons
E. Y. Kimchi, A. Burgos-robles, et al.
Basal forebrain cholinergic neurons drive conditioned reward-seeking: they fire during learned licking even before reward delivery and without external cues; photostimulation of these neurons or their basolateral amygdala terminals enhances conditioned responding but not unconditioned or innate actions; in vivo and ex vivo data show reward-contingency-dependent suppression of BLA projection neurons via monosynaptic muscarinic signaling and facilitation of BLA interneurons. Research conducted by Eyal Y Kimchi, Anthony Burgos-Robles, Gillian A Matthews, Tatenda Chakoma, Makenzie Patarino, Javier C Weddington, Cody Siciliano, Wannan Yang, Shaun Foutch, Renee Simons, Ming-fai Fong, Miao Jing, Yulong Li, Daniel B Polley, and Kay M Tye.
Related Publications
Explore these studies to deepen your understanding
Adjacent work that informs or extends this paper's methodology and findings.
Psychology
The central amygdala recruits mesocorticolimbic circuitry for pursuit of reward or pain
S. M. Warlow, E. E. Naffziger, et al.
Medicine and Health
Ectopic expression of a mechanosensitive channel confers spatiotemporal resolution to ultrasound stimulations of neurons for visual restoration
S. Cadoni, C. Demené, et al.
Physics
Observation of magnetic islands in tokamak plasmas during the suppression of edge-localized modes
M. Willensdorfer, V. Mitterauer, et al.
Physics
Assessment of the errors of high-fidelity two-qubit gates in silicon quantum dots
T. Tanttu, W. H. Lim, et al.

