Abstract

Diminished connectivity between midline-intralaminar thalamic nuclei and prefrontal cortex has been suggested to contribute to cognitive deficits that are detectable even in early stages of schizophrenia. The midline-intralaminar relay cells comprise the final link in the ascending arousal pathway and are selectively excited by the wake-promoting peptides hypocretin 1 and 2 (orexin A and B). This excitation occurs both at the level of the relay cell bodies and their axon terminals within prefrontal cortex. In rat brain slices, the release of glutamate from midline-intralaminar thalamocortical terminals induces excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) in layer V pyramidal cells in prefrontal cortex. When hypocretin is infused into medial prefrontal cortex of behaving animals, it improves performance in a complex cognitive task requiring divided attention. Chronic restraint stress causes atrophy of the apical dendritic arbors in layer V prefrontal pyramidal cells and leads to a reduction in hypocretin-induced EPSCs, indicating impairment in excitatory thalamocortical transmission. Thus, taken together with evidence for an underlying loss of excitatory thalamocortical connectivity in schizophrenia, stress in this illness could further exacerbate a breakdown in cortical processing of incoming information from the ascending arousal system.

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