The orbitofrontal cortex is required for learned modulation of innate olfactory behavior.


Journal

eNeuro
ISSN: 2373-2822
Titre abrégé: eNeuro
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101647362

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
15 Oct 2024
Historique:
received: 05 08 2024
revised: 17 09 2024
accepted: 03 10 2024
medline: 16 10 2024
pubmed: 16 10 2024
entrez: 15 10 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Animals have evolved innate responses to cues including social, food and predator odors. In the natural environment, animals are faced with choices that involve balancing risk and reward where innate significance may be at odds with internal need. The ability to update the value of a cue through learning is essential for navigating changing and uncertain environments. However, the mechanisms involved in this modulation are not well defined in mammals. We have established a new olfactory assay that challenges a thirsty mouse to choose an aversive odor over an attractive odor in foraging for water, thus, overriding their innate behavioral response to odor. Innately, mice prefer the attractive odor port over the aversive odor port. However, decreasing the probability of water at the attractive port leads mice to prefer the aversive port, reflecting a learned override of the innate response to the odors. The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) is a fourth order olfactory brain area, involved in flexible value association, with behaviorally relevant outputs throughout the limbic system. We performed optogenetic and chemogenetic silencing experiments that demonstrate the OFC is necessary for this learned modulation of innate aversion to odor. Further, we characterized odor evoked c-fos activity in learned and control mice and found significant suppression of activity in the bed nucleus of the striaterminalis (BNST), lateral septum (LS), central (CeA) and medial amygdala (MeA). These findings reveal that the OFC is necessary for the learned override of innate behavior and may signal to limbic structures to modulate innate response to odor.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39406479
pii: ENEURO.0343-24.2024
doi: 10.1523/ENEURO.0343-24.2024
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2024 Miyamoto et al.

Auteurs

Kiana Miyamoto (K)

University of California San Diego, Department of Neurobiology, School of Biological Sciences, San Diego, California.

Jeremy Stark (J)

University of California San Diego, Department of Neurobiology, School of Biological Sciences, San Diego, California.

Mayuri Kathrotia (M)

University of California San Diego, Department of Neurobiology, School of Biological Sciences, San Diego, California.

Amanda Luu (A)

University of California San Diego, Department of Neurobiology, School of Biological Sciences, San Diego, California.

Joelle Victoriano (J)

University of California San Diego, Department of Neurobiology, School of Biological Sciences, San Diego, California.

Chung Lung Chan (CL)

University of California San Diego, Department of Neurobiology, School of Biological Sciences, San Diego, California.

Donghyung Lee (D)

University of California San Diego, Department of Neurobiology, School of Biological Sciences, San Diego, California.

Cory M Root (CM)

University of California San Diego, Department of Neurobiology, School of Biological Sciences, San Diego, California cmroot@ucsd.edu.

Classifications MeSH