Abstract

The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) is an important brain area for executive functions. The OFC projects to both the nucleus accumbens (NAc) and the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala (BLA). These two pathways share some similar behavioral functions, but their anatomical and physiological properties have not been compared before. In this study, we first explored the connection of the lateral OFC (lOFC) to NAc core (NAcc) and/or BLA, especially the collateral projections (experiments 1 and 2) with rats. In experiment 1, fluorophore-conjugated retrograde tracers were locally infused into the NAcc and the BLA to sample neurons in the lOFC. Our results revealed that along the anterior-posterior axis of the lOFC, more NAcc- and/or BLA-projecting neurons were distributed toward the posterior end, but the average percentage of collateral projecting neurons at the four sampled lOFC levels remained fairly stable. In experiment 2, antidromic single units in the lOFC responsive to the NAcc and/or the BLA stimulation were identified in anesthetized rats. However, we found that collateral projections from the lOFC to NAcc and BLA were sparse. We next studied the physiological characteristics of these two pathways (experiment 3). In this experiment, orthodromic single units in the NAcc or the BLA responsive to the lOFC stimulation were located in anesthetized rats. Our results showed no difference in the evoked thresholds or the intensity-response probability curves between the two. Together, our results showed that these two pathways were similar in projecting neuron distribution and physiological characteristics.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Using the double retrograde tracing and electrophysiological approach, we reported that among the sampled NAcc- or the BLA-projecting lOFC neurons, the percentage of collateral projections were fairly stable (about 20%-25%) along the lOFC anterior-posterior axis. Furthermore, among the neurons sampled in the NAcc and the BLA, there was no difference in physiological characteristics in response to lOFC stimulation between the two pathways.

Full Text
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