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Context and topography determine the role of basolateral amygdala metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 in appetitive Pavlovian responding.

Author(s): Khoo SY, LeCocq MR, Deyab GE, Chaudhri N

Neuropsychopharmacology. 2019 Feb 08;: Authors: Khoo SY, LeCocq MR, Deyab GE, Chaudhri N

Article GUID: 30758331


Title:Context and topography determine the role of basolateral amygdala metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 in appetitive Pavlovian responding.
Authors:Khoo SYLeCocq MRDeyab GEChaudhri N
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30758331?dopt=Abstract
Category:Neuropsychopharmacology
PMID:30758331
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology/FRQS Groupe de recherche en neurobiologie comportementale, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Quebec, Montreal, Canada.
2 Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology/FRQS Groupe de recherche en neurobiologie comportementale, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Quebec, Montreal, Canada. nadia.chaudhri@concordia.ca.

Description:

Context and topography determine the role of basolateral amygdala metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 in appetitive Pavlovian responding.

Neuropsychopharmacology. 2019 Feb 08;:

Authors: Khoo SY, LeCocq MR, Deyab GE, Chaudhri N

Abstract

Preclinical data have shown that the excitatory metabotropic Gaq-coupled glutamate receptor, mGluR5, has a role in substance abuse and relapse. However, little is known about the contribution of mGluR5 to the expression of conditioned responding elicited by appetitive Pavlovian cues. We investigated this question in rats that were trained to associate a discrete, auditory conditioned stimulus (CS) with a fructose-glucose solution (5.5% fructose/4.5% glucose; "sugar"). In subsequent tests for the expression of conditioned responding without sugar delivery, CS-elicited fluid port entries were elevated in a context associated with sugar, relative to an equally familiar, neutral context. Inhibiting mGluR5 via systemic injections of a negative allosteric modulator (MTEP; 5?mg/kg) reduced CS port entries in both the sugar context and neutral context. Targeting MTEP microinjections (3?µg/side; 0.3?µl/min) to the nucleus accumbens (Acb) core had no effect on CS port entries at test, whereas the same manipulation in the basolateral amygdala (BLA) produced effects that were topographically dependent. Specifically, microinjecting MTEP in the posterior BLA had no effect on behavior, whereas inhibiting mGluR5 in the anterior BLA enhanced the contextual discrimination of CS port entries. These data are the first to show a role of mGluR5 in the context-dependent expression of appetitive Pavlovian conditioned responding, with a topographically defined arrangement of mGluR5 in the BLA being particularly important for context-based responding to a discrete, appetitive cue.

PMID: 30758331 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]