Abstract

Anatomical and functional evidence suggests that the PFC is fairly unique among all cortical regions, as it not only receives input from, but also robustly projects back to mesopontine monoaminergic and cholinergic cell groups. Thus, the PFC is in position to exert a powerful top-down control over several state-setting modulatory transmitter systems that are critically involved in the domains of arousal, motivation, reward/aversion, working memory, mood regulation, and stress processing. Regarding this scenario, the origin of cortical afferents to the ventral tegmental area (VTA), laterodorsal tegmental nucleus (LDTg), and median raphe nucleus (MnR) was here compared in rats, using the retrograde tracer cholera toxin subunit b (CTb). CTb injections into VTA, LDTg, or MnR produced retrograde labeling in the cortical mantle, which was mostly confined to frontal polar, medial, orbital, and lateral PFC subdivisions, along with anterior- and mid-cingulate areas. Remarkably, in all of the three groups, retrograde labeling was densest in layer V pyramidal neurons of the infralimbic, prelimbic, medial/ventral orbital and frontal polar cortex. Moreover, a lambda-shaped region around the apex of the rostral pole of the nucleus accumbens stood out as heavily labeled, mainly after injections into the lateral VTA and LDTg. In general, retrograde PFC labeling was strongest following injections into MnR and weakest following injections into VTA. Altogether, our findings reveal a fairly similar set of prefrontal afferents to VTA, LDTg, and MnR, further supporting an eminent functional role of the PFC as a controller of major state-setting mesopontine modulatory transmitter systems.

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