National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke(R01NS075531)
Seventh Framework Programme(FP7)
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke(NINDS, R01NS075531)
Subjects:
Basic medicine
Biological sciences
Health sciences
Basal forebrain cholinergic neurons constitute a major neuromodulatory system implicated
in normal cognition and neurodegenerative dementias. Cholinergic projections densely
innervate neocortex, releasing acetylcholine to regulate arousal, attention, and learning.
However, their precise behavioral function is poorly understood because identified
cholinergic neurons have never been recorded during behavior. To determine which aspects
of cognition their activity might support, we recorded cholinergic neurons using optogenetic
identification in mice performing an auditory detection task requiring sustained attention.
We found that a non-cholinergic basal forebrain population-but not cholinergic neurons-were
correlated with trial-to-trial measures of attention. Surprisingly, cholinergic neurons
responded to reward and punishment with unusual speed and precision (18 +/- 3 ms).
Cholinergic responses were scaled by the unexpectedness of reinforcement and were
highly similar across neurons and two nuclei innervating distinct cortical areas.
These results reveal that the cholinergic system broadcasts a rapid and precisely
timed reinforcement signal, supporting fast cortical activation and plasticity.