Abstract
Several neuropsychiatric conditions, such as addiction and schizophrenia, may arise in part from dysregulated activity of ventral tegmental area dopaminergic (THVTA) neurons, as well as from more global maladaptation in neurocircuit function. However, whether THVTA activity affects large-scale brain-wide function remains unknown. Here we selectively activated THVTA neurons in transgenic rats and measured resulting changes in whole-brain activity using stimulus-evoked functional magnetic resonance imaging. Applying a standard generalized linear model analysis approach, our results indicate that selective optogenetic stimulation of THVTA neurons enhanced cerebral blood volume signals in striatal target regions in a dopamine receptor-dependent manner. However, brain-wide voxel-based principal component analysis of the same data set revealed that dopaminergic modulation activates several additional anatomically distinct regions throughout the brain, not typically associated with dopamine release events. Furthermore, explicit pairing of THVTA neuronal activation with a forepaw stimulus of a particular frequency expanded the sensory representation of that stimulus, not exclusively within the somatosensory cortices, but brain-wide. These data suggest that modulation of THVTA neurons can impact brain dynamics across many distributed anatomically distinct regions, even those that receive little to no direct THVTA input.
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INTRODUCTION
Midbrain dopaminergic neurons have been reported to encode reward prediction errors (Cohen et al, 2012; Schultz, 1998; Steinberg et al, 2013) and signal the incentive salience (Berridge and Robinson, 1998) of sensory cues. During reward-seeking behavior, burst firing of these neurons results in phasic dopamine release (Day et al, 2007; Phillips et al, 2003; Stuber et al, 2008) in cortical and limbic terminal fields such as the medial prefrontal cortex and nucleus accumbens (NAc), which in conjunction with other neurotransmitters act to modulate postsynaptic neuronal firing (Gee et al, 2012; Surmeier et al, 2007) and promote changes in motivated behavioral output (Salamone et al, 2007; Stuber et al, 2011; Tsai et al, 2009; Tye et al, 2013). The direct consequences of dopamine signaling are largely restricted to brain regions that contain appreciable presynaptic fibers that release dopamine, as well as postsynaptic dopamine receptors. However, dopaminergic signaling may also indirectly influence the activity in multiple brain regions, some of which may receive little to no direct dopamine input. By sculpting activity dynamics of neurons that are polysynaptically downstream, ventral tegmental area (VTA) DAergic neurons may thus modulate a much larger functional brain circuit.
In addition to dopamine signaling by natural rewards (Cohen et al, 2012; Day et al, 2007; Roitman et al, 2004, 2008; Schultz, 1998), drugs of abuse increase extracellular dopamine in mesolimbic terminal fields such as the NAc (Di Chiara and Imperato, 1988; Phillips et al, 2003; Stuber et al, 2005a, 2005b), supporting the notion that aberrant dopamine signaling may have a principal role in mediating the neurobiological and behavioral maladaptations associated with addiction (Pascoli et al, 2015). A hallmark feature of addiction is the enhanced salience that sensory stimuli acquire when paired with drugs of abuse, which can promote drug craving (Childress et al, 1999; Kalivas and Volkow, 2005; Koob and Volkow, 2009; Volkow et al, 2004). This enhanced salience triggered by drug-associative cues likely involves phasic dopamine release as drug-associated cues can directly evoke robust dopamine release events in the NAc that are modulated by the cue–drug association (Phillips et al, 2003b; Stuber et al, 2005b). Although release of dopamine during this process would be predicted to have direct effects on striatal neuronal activity, it is also possible that dopamine release, when paired with a sensory stimulus, may modulate the salience or value of that particular stimuli via effects that occur in brain regions downstream of circuits that are directly modulated by dopamine. Indeed, a previous report demonstrated that electrical stimulation of the VTA, timelocked to an auditory stimulus presentation, resulted in enlarged sensory representation of that particular stimulus within the auditory cortex (Bao et al, 2001). Thus, previous work implies that dopamine signaling may modulate cue-evoked behavioral responding by acting both at the site of release in striatal targets and by changing brain activity in potentially many other brain nuclei that do not directly receive appreciable dopamine input.
To further investigate these two complementary ideas, we studied how in vivo modulation of VTA dopaminergic neurons altered brain-wide activity patterns using in vivo optogenetics coupled with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) (Domingos et al, 2011; Ferenczi et al, 2016; Gerits et al, 2012; Kahn et al, 2011; Lee et al, 2010). We first tested whether selective optogenetic stimulation of VTA dopaminergic (THVTA) neurons produced changes in fMRI signals and altered activity within multiple, anatomically distinct regions that directly receive dopamine input. This approach capitalizes on the genetic specificity offered by optogenetic strategies and the capability of resolving brain-wide macroscale patterns of activity afforded by fMRI. Using a standard generalized linear model (GLM) analysis approach, our results indicate that selective activation of THVTA neurons produces dopamine receptor-dependent increases in CBV signals in well-established dopaminergic terminal fields such as the striatum. In contrast, whole brain voxel-based principal component analysis (PCA) of the same data set, which allowed us to survey changes in brain-wide activity, revealed that dopaminergic modulation activates many additional anatomically defined regions throughout the brain. Using our developed PCA-fMRI approach, we also explored how dopamine stimulation coupled with a discrete sensory stimulus affects the representation of that stimulus throughout the entire brain. We reveal that explicit pairing of THVTA neuron activity with forepaw stimulation markedly alters the brain-wide sensory representation of that stimulus. These findings provide new insight into the global adaptation in neurocircuit function associated with the attribution of salience to sensory cues in the environment.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Experimental Subjects and Stereotactic Surgery
All procedures were conducted in accordance with the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, as adopted by the National Institutes of Health, and with approval of the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee at the University of North Carolina (UNC). Adult (400–450 g) male tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-ires-cre Long–Evans rats were group housed until surgery and were maintained on a 12-h light cycle (lights off at 1900 hours) with mild food restriction to maintain ~90% body weight during the duration of the study. To target dopamine neurons within the midbrain, TH-ires-cre rats were endotracheally intubated and ventilated using a small animal ventilator (SAR-830/PA; CWE, Armore, PA) with ~1.5% isoflurane in medical air before being placed into a stereotactic frame (Model 962; Kopf Instruments, Tujunga, CA). For all experiments, rats were microinjected with quadruple injections of 1 μl of purified and concentrated adeno-associated virus (~1012 infections units per ml, packaged by the UNC Vector Core Facility) into the VTA using the following coordinates (in mm from bregma): −5.4 and −6.2 anterior/posterior, ±0.7 medial/lateral, and −8.4 and −7.4 dorsal/ventral. VTA dopaminergic neurons were transduced with an AAV5 carrying a Cre-inducible expression cassette encoding channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) fused to an enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (eYFP) under the control of the EF1α promoter (AAV5-DIO-ChR2-eYFP; THVTA::ChR2 rats) or only eYFP (AAV5-DIO-eYFP; THVTA::control rats). 200 μm multimode chronic optical fibers were stereotactically implanted bilaterally at a 10° angle directly above the VTA using the following stereotactic coordinates: −5.8 mm to bregma, ±2.14 mm lateral to midline, and −7.8 mm ventral to the skull surface. The time from virus injection to the start of the MRI experiments was 5–6 weeks for all subjects.
fMRI Procedures
MRI was performed using a 9.4 T Bruker BioSpec system with a BGA-9S gradient insert (Bruker Corp., Billerica, MA) at the UNC Biomedical Research Imaging Center (BRIC). On the day of MRI experiments, each rat was endotracheally intubated and ventilated with ~1.5% isoflurane in medical air. The ventilation rate and volume were adjusted via a capnometer (Surgivet v9004; Smith Medical, Waukesha, WI) to maintain end-tidal CO2 (EtCO2) within a range of 3.0±0.2%. Noninvasive EtCO2 values were previously calibrated against invasive blood-gas samplings under identical baseline conditions, resulting in an arterial pCO2 of 37.6± 4.7 mm Hg (Shih et al, 2013). Heart rate and oxygen saturation (SpO2) were continuously monitored by a noninvasive MouseOx Plus System with MR-compatible sensors (STARR Life Science Corp., Oakmont PA) and maintained within normal ranges (~280 b.p.m. and >96%, respectively). Rectal temperature was maintained at 37±0.5 °C with a warm-water circulating pad. Black tape was placed over the eyes and a masking light was directed into the face of each rat to minimize visual stimulation during laser light delivery.
A home-made surface coil with an internal diameter of 1.6 cm placed directly over the head was used as an RF transceiver. Magnetic field homogeneity was optimized using standard FASTMAP shimming with first-order shims on an isotropic voxel of 7 × 7 × 7 mm3 encompassing the imaging slices. A RARE T2-weighted image was taken in the mid-sagittal plane to localize the anatomical position by identifying the anterior commissure at 0.36 mm posterior to bregma. To ensure anatomical consistency of the imaging data, 12 coronal slices were acquired using T2-weighted imaging, with the fourth slice from the anterior direction aligned with the anterior commissure. A RARE sequence (spectral width=47 kHz, TR/TE=2500/33 ms, FOV=2.56 × 2.56 cm2, slice thickness=1 mm, matrix=256 × 256, RARE factor=8, and number of averages=8) was used to confirm optical fiber position with reference to the cortical surface, midline, and the anterior commissure. For functional scans, single shot gradient echo-EPI sequence (spectral width=300 kHz, TR/TE=1000/8.1 ms, FOV=2.56 × 2.56 cm2, slice thickness=1 mm, matrix=80 × 80, providing temporal resolution=1 s) was used.
During fMRI, dexmedetomidine (0.1 mg/kg per h) and pancuronium bromide (1.0 mg/kg per h) were infused intraperitoneally and isoflurane was lowered to 0.5% 30 min after the infusion began (Fukuda et al, 2013). Cerebral blood volume (CBV)-weighted fMRI (Mandeville et al, 1998) was achieved by injecting Feraheme (AMAG Pharmaceuticals, Lexington, MA) at a dose of 30 mg Fe/kg via a tail vein catheter. CBV-weighted fMRI was chosen over the more conventional blood oxygenation-level-dependent (BOLD) fMRI owing to its ability to provide significantly greater functional sensitivity (Kim et al, 2013). Optical fibers were coupled via 3-m patch cables to solid-state lasers (473 nm wavelength) located outside the MRI room delivering ~10 mW light to each hemisphere of the VTA. Evoked fMRI scans were acquired for 100 s during which photostimulation was applied in a 20-s OFF, 10-s ON, 30-s OFF, 10-s ON, and 30-s OFF pattern. Subjects underwent two to five repeated trials at each photostimulation frequency (10, 20, 30, and 40 Hz at 5 ms pulse width) in a pseudorandom manner. Dopamine D1 receptor antagonist, SCH23390 (0.6 mg/kg) (Sigma), was injected intravenously to explore its effects on stimulus-evoked CBV changes observed in THVTA::ChR2 rats. This SCH23390 dose was chosen because it was comparable to the dose used in a similar fMRI study (Marota et al, 2000). For paired forepaw and optogenetic stimulation experiments, electrical forepaw stimulation was applied using two needle electrodes inserted under the skin of the right forepaw of each subject. The stimulation was applied in a 20-s OFF, 10-s ON, and 70-s OFF pattern. To measure the frequency dependence of the stimulus-evoked activation, subjects underwent two to five repeated trials at the following frequencies: 1, 3, 9, 15, and 21 Hz with a fixed pulse width of 0.3 ms and a current of 1.5–3.0 mA (prepairing). Then, a repeated pairing of forepaw electrical stimulation at 9 Hz with 30 Hz optogenetic stimulation of VTA dopamine neurons was performed with an initial 20-s OFF, followed by 20 blocks of 10-s ON and 70-s OFF. Finally, changes in CBV signals and frequency dependence in response to all forepaw stimuli frequencies were reassessed (postpairing).
Data Processing and Statistical Analysis
GLM-based stimulation analysis
fMRI data analyzed using a GLM were processed using Matlab (Math-Works, Natick, MA) and Statistical Parametric Mapping codes, with the pipeline similar to our previous publications (Lai et al, 2015; Shih et al, 2014a, 2014b; Younce et al, 2014). Automatic coregistrations were applied to realign time-series data within subjects to correct subtle drift of EPI images and then again across subjects to provide group-based fMRI maps. Data were analyzed using the Analysis of Functional Neuroimages (AFNIs) with the framework of GLM (Cox, 1996; Worsley and Friston, 1995; Worsley et al, 2002), with false discovery rate correction to adjust for the multiple comparisons of fMRI maps (p<0.05). The stimulation paradigm was convoluted with response model of Feraheme (Leite et al, 2002) injection in AFNI package to get an ideal model of hemodynamic response (Supplementary Figure S2F). Regions of interest (ROIs) were placed on the dorsal striatum bilaterally to extract fMRI time-course data after the images were coregistered. For pairing experiments, ROI was placed on the contralateral somatosensory cortex (S1). To control for Feraheme metabolism over the course of each experiment, the following equations were used to calculate ∆CBV: Baseline ΔR2*=−1/TE ln(Sprestim/S0), where Sprestim and S0 represents MR signal intensity after and before Feraheme injection. Stimulus evoked ΔR2*=−1/TE ln(Sstim/Sprestim), where Sstim and Sprestim are the MR signal intensities during and before stimulation, respectively. CBV changes were calculated by dividing stimulus-evoked ΔR2* by baseline ΔR2* values. The effect of optogenetic and forepaw stimulation frequency on ∆CBV change was calculated by averaging CBV values from the first 20 s time points during each stimulation epoch. Two-way ANOVA tests followed by Bonferroni post hoc comparisons were applied for comparisons with more than two groups. All data were expressed as mean±SEM and significance was set at p<0.05.
PCA-based stimulation analysis
PCA analysis pipeline for data analyzed using this method within this manuscript was written in python 2.7 using numpy and scikitlearn packages. All analysis code is available in well-documented iPython notebooks (see Supplementary Information).
Histology, immunohistochemistry, and microscopy
Rats were deeply anesthetized with pentobarbital, and transcardially perfused with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) followed by 4% (weight/volume) paraformaldehyde in PBS. Brains were postfixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 24 h and transferred to 30% sucrose in ddH2O for 48 h. Forty micrometers of brain sections were collected and blocked in 10% normal donkey serum in 0.1% Triton (200:1800 μl) for 1 h. Sections were then incubated in primary antibody (TH, 1:500 Pel Freeze; made in sheep) for 48 h at 4 °C. Following 4 × 10 min PBS washes, the sections were incubated in secondary antibody (Dylight 649 donkey anti-sheep, 1:800; Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, West Grove, PA) for 24 h at 4 °C. All sections were coverslipped with Fluoroshield with DAPI (Sigma Aldrich, St Louis, MO). Z-stack and tiled images of mounted brain sections were visualized using Zeiss LSM 710 confocal microscope with a × 20 or × 63 objective.
RESULTS
Viral Targeting of VTA Dopaminergic Neurons in TH-Cre Rats
To selectively stimulate THVTA neurons in vivo, we introduced the light-gated cation channel, ChR2 conjugated to eYFP (ChR2-eYFP), selectively into VTA neurons in transgenic rats that express Cre recombinase under the control of the tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) gene promoter (Witten et al, 2011) using established viral procedures (Jennings et al, 2013) (Figure 1a). Because of a recent report of ectopic targeting of VTA neurons in TH-Cre mouse lines (Lammel et al, 2015), we performed a detailed quantitative assessment of viral targeting to TH+ neurons in the TH-Cre rat line across the anterior/posterior and medial/lateral subregions of the midbrain (Figures 1a–c). We quantified the location of all neurons within anterior, middle, and posterior sections expressing only eYFP (eYFP+/TH−), TH (eYFP-/TH+), and neurons that expressed both (eYFP+/TH+) (n=9 sections in n=3 rats). Collapsed across the anterior–posterior axis containing the VTA, we observed highly specific viral transduction of TH+ neurons (97.4±1.0%, n=9 slices from n=3 rats; Figure 1d). Notably, few neurons that were eYFP+, but showed TH immunoreactivity that could not be resolved above background, tended to reside in the anterior VTA or ventral to the VTA in the interpeduncular nucleus (Figure 1c). Based on stereotactic optical fiber placement directly above the VTA and predicted transmission of light power at 473 nm through the brain tissue, it was unlikely that light from the optical fiber tip would spread to illuminate and activate those few neurons in the IPN that were eYFP+/TH− (Aravanis et al, 2007). In TH-Cre rats injected with AAV-DIO-ChR2-eYFP, we also observed substantial innervation of striatal subregions including the dorsal medial striatum (DMS) and the NAc (Figures 1e and f). These results further validate the use of TH-Cre rats for targeted manipulation of THVTA neurons, with minimal targeting to TH− neurons in and around the VTA.
Whole Brain Analysis Following THVTA Neuron Stimulation
In separate rats, we expressed ChR2-eYFP or eYFP alone in THVTA neurons and implanted bilateral optical fibers directly above the VTA for light delivery (Sparta et al, 2012) (Supplementary Figure S1). Following recovery from surgery and sufficient time for adequate ChR2-eYFP expression in THVTA neurons, sedated rats were interfaced with a custom-built surface coil, placed in a 9.4 Tesla small animal MRI scanner, and the implanted optical fibers were connected to 473 nm diode-pumped solid-state lasers located outside the MRI room (Figure 2a). Following acquisition of 12, coronal T2-weighted anatomical image sections from each animal (Supplementary Figure S1B), CBV-weighted fMRI (Kim et al, 2013; Mandeville et al, 1998; Shih et al, 2009; Smirnakis et al, 2007) data, which indirectly measures neuronal activity by detecting changes in hemodynamic signals accompanying vascular responses, were acquired using a single-shot echo planar imaging sequence at 1 s temporal resolution. To produce sustained, dopaminergic signaling, THVTA neurons were optically stimulated at 10–40 Hz for 10 s (Supplementary Figures S2A and C). With these parameters we measured CBV responses across 12 continuous coronal slices of 1 mm thickness, each encompassing nearly the entire cerebrum. Using a standard GLM to compare each voxel’s activity trace to a predefined stimulation template or hemodynamic response function (Ferenczi et al, 2016; Leite et al, 2002; Monti, 2011) (Supplementary Figure S2E), optogenetic stimulation of THVTA neurons produced pronounced CBV increases in striatal brain regions in a frequency-dependent manner relative to control animals that received laser-light delivery, but only expressed eYFP in THVTA neurons (Supplementary Figure S2). Further, systemic administration of a dopamine D1 receptor (D1R) antagonist, SCH23390, significantly attenuated CBV signals caused by THVTA optogenetic stimulation (Supplementary Figure S2B). The D1R antagonist had no significant effect on eYFP control animals, verifying that the antagonist is specifically blocking the THVTA neuron-stimulated signal, and not causing a stimulation-independent effect on the baseline (Supplementary Figure S2C). Taken together, these data show that selective activation of THVTA neurons produces dopamine receptor-dependent signaling that result in increased CBV signals in dopaminergic terminal fields.
Owing to the lack of a well-defined dopamine-evoked hemodynamic response function and to mitigate the biases and assumptions imposed by traditional fMRI whole brain signal analysis, we developed an analytical pipeline by which all imaging voxels (35 182 per brain) and associated CBV-weighted time-series data were subjected to PCA factorization (Andersen et al, 1999; Freeman et al, 2014) (Figure 2c and see Supplementary Information). This resulted in a substantial reduction of the dimensionality of the spatial-temporal data set from 35 182 down to 75 PCs that explained 80% of the variance of the data. Importantly, the first PC alone explained 7% of the variance of data collected from ChR2-eYFP rats. The percent variance of the data explained by each subsequent PC reached an asymptote by 3–4 PCs (Figure 2d).
The first PC plotted as a function of time represented the effect of THVTA optogenetic stimulation as it significantly increased from the baseline period (0–20 s) in each poststimulation period (30–60 and 70–100 s) (t(48.0)=11.69, p<0.001, Welch’s t-test for poststimulation period 1 and t(38.7)=7.15, p<0.001, Welch’s t-test for poststimulation period 2; Figure 2e), largely recapitulating the ROI analysis of striatal signals shown in Supplementary Figure S2A. In contrast, data collected from rats only expressing eYFP in THVTA neurons showed no significant poststimulation response. As the weight of a voxel to a given PC reflects the correlation between the voxel’s and the PC time-series signals (Yamamoto et al, 2014), we hypothesized that a given voxel’s contribution to PC1 would highly correlate with the raw signal intensity for that voxel in the poststimulation period exclusively in data collected from ChR2-eYFP rats. Supporting this, a highly significant positive Pearson’s correlation between these two variables was observed in the ChR2-eYFP group (R2=0.68), slope=1.12, p<0.001). In contrast, the eYFP group showed a slight, but significant negative correlation (R2=0.08, slope=−0.28, p<0.001; Figure 2f). We then ranked all voxels as a function of PC1 weight and plotted the time series for the top 500 voxels for both ChR2-eYFP and eYFP groups (Figure 2g). Comparing these results to the top 500 voxels ranked by their mean poststimulation response shows a marked enhancement of the temporal structure of the data (Supplementary Figure S3B), further supporting our PCA-based analysis approach.
We then mapped the voxels that significantly contributed to the PC representing the stimulation effect back to a T2-weighted reference brain atlas (Figure 2h). This also showed a marked enhancement of brain-wide activation patterns evoked by the stimulation compared with standard GLM-based significant voxels (Supplementary Figure S3C and D). In order to then place all significant PC1-weighted voxels back to defined brain regions, we annotated all 12 T2-weighed brain slices into 42 anatomical subregions based on two widely used rodent brain atlases (Lein et al, 2007; Paxinos and Watson, 2005), taking into account the spatial resolution of fMRI (Supplementary Figure S4). Extracted significant voxels (based on PCA and GLM) mapped to numerous diverse brain regions (Figure 2i). All GLM-extracted voxels largely fell into ROIs within striatal subregions and frontal cortices as predicted based on innervation patterns of THVTA neurons (Swanson, 1982) (Figures 1e and f). However, significant PCA-extracted voxels represented a substantially larger fraction of each ROI within these subregions, further highlighting the enhanced sensitivity of this method. Furthermore, many additional brain regions were identified with a high fraction of significant voxels including basal ganglia, basal forebrain, and sensory cortical regions (Figure 2i). Interestingly, intravenous injection of the D1R antagonist not only significantly attenuated CBV signals within striatal target regions but it also prevented stimulation-induced alterations in brain areas that do not directly receive THVTA input (Supplementary Figures S3E and F). To investigate these effects at a more physiologically relevant stimulation period, THVTA neurons were optically stimulated at 30 Hz for 1 s in a subset of animals (Supplementary Figure S5). PCA-based analysis of this data set revealed that selective stimulation of THVTA neurons for 1 s caused activation in fewer pixels across the brain. Interestingly, while the majority of activated pixels were in striatal target regions, some of the regions that showed enhancement at 10 s stimulation also showed slight activation at 1 s. Collectively, this analytical approach reveals for the first time that increased dopaminergic activity produces dispersed effects not only in brain regions that directly receive THVTA input but also in numerous accessory regions not typically associated with direct VTA DAergic modulation.
Whole Brain Analysis of Forepaw Stimulation Pre and Post Pairing with THVTA Neuron Stimulation
In pathological conditions, such as addiction and schizophrenia, aberrant dopaminergic activity may act to overenhance the salience of particular intrinsic and extrinsic stimuli (Berridge and Robinson, 1998; Kapur, 2003). Nonspecific stimulation of the VTA can also alter cortical plasticity (Bao et al, 2001; Gee et al, 2012; Lewis and O’Donnell, 2000; Otani et al, 2003); however, it is unclear whether explicit pairing of THVTA activity with a discrete sensory stimulus alters the brain-wide sensory representation of that stimulus. Thus, in a new cohort of rats we tested whether somatosensory representations measured with fMRI was affected by coincidental and selective THVTA activity (Supplementary Figure S6). We first measured changes in CBV signals in response to a range of forepaw stimulation frequencies. We then paired a single forepaw stimulation frequency (9 Hz) with 30 Hz optogenetic stimulation of THVTA neurons 20 times (one pairing every 70 s). Following the pairing protocol, we reassessed changes in CBV signals in response to all forepaw stimuli frequencies (Figure 3a). Forepaw stimulation produced time-locked CBV increases in the contralateral somatosensory cortex ROI in a frequency-dependent manner. Following pairing of 9 Hz forepaw stimulation with THVTA activity, there was a selective enhancement in CBV signals in response to 9 Hz subsequent forepaw stimulation compared with other non-paired frequencies and data from control animals that received laser light delivery, but did not express ChR2 in THVTA neurons (Figures 3b–e and Supplementary Figure S7).
To assess whole brain activity patterns before and after forepaw-THVTA pairing, we applied the PCA pipeline described above (Figure 2c) to this data set. PC1 signal intensity evoked by forepaw stimulation was significantly enhanced following pairing in the ChR2-eYFP group (t(18)=19.484, p<0.001) but not to eYFP controls (t(18)=0.660, P=0.52 two-tailed t-test of the mean response in the stimulation period; Figures 3f–h and Supplementary Figure S8). Significant voxel weights to the PC1 vector remapped back to the reference atlas revealed a striking enhancement of the fMRI measured sensory representation of forepaw stimulation induced by the pairing protocol (Figures 3i–k). To determine whether repeated THVTA forepaw stimulation pairing gradually enhanced the representation as a function of each pairing, we also calculated the PC fMRI signal for each THVTA-forepaw pairing (20 total). Normalized to the maximum PC signal evoked by forepaw stimulation signals after the pairing, we observed that the first and all subsequent THVTA forepaw stimulation pairings produced an increase in the PC signal in ChR2-eYFP rats relative to eYFP controls (Figure 4a). This is further shown by plotting the ratio of each evoked response per pairing between ChR2-eYFP and eYFP groups (Figure 4b). For either group, normalizing the PC signal to the respective prepairing forepaw response revealed a gradual habituation of the signal with increasing number of pairings (Figure 4c). Collectively, these data suggest that forepaw stimulation paired with dopaminergic activity enhances the PC-fMRI signal gain during pairing as well as the subsequent brain-wide representation of sensory stimuli.
DISCUSSION
It is well known that midbrain dopaminergic neuronal activation produces neuronal excitation and plasticity in striatal target regions. However, it is not yet clear whether the effect of elevated dopaminergic signaling is limited to these areas. This is an important question to address as it might shed light on the extent of anomalous activity seen in disorders such as addiction and schizophrenia. Two reports, using similar opto-fMRI methods, have shown that stimulation of VTA dopamine neurons produce BOLD signal changes locally within the VTA (Domingos et al, 2011) and the striatum (Ferenczi et al, 2016). Through our development of novel analytic methods, we extend these findings to show that fMRI-related signal changes are not restricted to these regions but occur brain wide. Our findings suggest that large-scale brain-wide activity dynamics, measured across many distinct neuroanatomical regions, are also directly or indirectly regulated by the activity of VTA dopaminergic neurons in vivo. In addition, dopaminergic activity, coincidental with a particular sensory stimulus, enhanced stimulus-specific neuronal representations brain wide. Previous work has largely focused on the timing at which dopaminergic activity occurs during ongoing behavior (Cohen et al, 2012; Day et al, 2007; Phillips et al, 2003; Schultz, 1998; Stuber et al, 2008) as well as cellular mechanisms by which dopamine signaling can alter the function of individual neurons (Gee et al, 2012; Jacob et al, 2013; Lewis and O’Donnell, 2000; Marder, 2012). Although we can state that changes in the brain-wide signal are a result of direct stimulation of VTA TH-expressing neurons, we cannot exclude an effect from coincidental signaling by glutamate/GABA that may also be released from VTA dopaminergic neurons (Chuhma et al, 2004; Hnasko et al, 2010; Lavin et al, 2005; Stuber et al, 2010; Tritsch et al, 2012, 2014). Nevertheless, in the presence of a D1R antagonist, the extent of activation because of THVTA stimulation reduced significantly, with only a few non-striatal voxels showing significant responses (Supplementary Figure S3F). Indeed, one study (Marota et al, 2000) found that SCH23390 alone provided nearly complete blockade of cocaine-induced functional responses in rats, implicating a major role for D1 receptor activation during cocaine administration. Thus, while a significant amount of brain-wide responses is D1R dependent, the residual striatal signal may be dependent on either D2R activation or glutamate/GABA signaling. Although our current work shows that VTA dopaminergic neuronal activity has immediate global consequences, and can remodel brain-wide neuronal activity patterns alone or in the presence of a sensory stimulus, future work is needed to assess how each specific neurotransmitter species that is released by VTA dopaminergic neurons contributes to these phenomena.
To detect and characterize brain-wide activity patterns measured with fMRI following THVTA optogenetic stimulation, we developed a PCA-based approach. This allowed us to reduce the dimensionality of the data in the voxel space, isolate the PC temporal trace that represents the stimulation effect, and then map voxels that contribute significant weight to this PC back to anatomical locations in the brain. The identification of brain voxels that significantly contribute to the PC representing the stimulation effect is effectively similar to the standard GLM approach (Monti, 2011) with notable distinctions. First, standard implementations of GLM require a priori specification of an expected stimulation effect. This is traditionally calculated using a hemodynamic response function. However, these functions vary widely across brain regions and species, and additionally are oftentimes derived from task-evoked activity, which is difficult to evaluate brain wide. Moreover, if multiple valid stimulation templates need to be compared (especially in the case with multiple ROIs), power of the analysis can be markedly compromised due to corrections for multiple comparisons. In contrast, our model-free approach is entirely data driven and makes no assumptions of regional fMRI response specificity, thus making it highly applicable for analyzing brain-wide changes in fMRI activity throughout the entire rat brain in response to time-locked stimulation. Another key benefit of our approach is apparent in the case where the stimulation of interest is not of a sensory region but is instead of a region that releases neuromodulators (e.g. VTA). In this case, modeling the expected stimulation effect as a standard sensory stimulation-based template may be inappropriate as these models assume an exponential decay of the signal immediately following stimulation offset (Supplementary Figure S2F). However, extracting the stimulation response template using PCA (Figure 2e) shows that the stimulation has a prolonged effect even after stimulation offset. Thus, in such cases, we advocate a data-driven approach to extract the stimulation response function. One caveat to our method is that a single PC representing the stimulation effect might also contain shared variation that is independent of the stimulation (eg, intrinsic brain oscillations across regions). This is mitigated within our pipeline by averaging raw fMRI voxels across all animals in each group, as the shared temporal variability that remains in the data is likely only due to the stimulation. Furthermore, the voxel-wise analysis used here addresses some of the concerns and limitations inherent to cluster-based approaches more common in fMRI data analysis (Eklund et al, 2016). It is also possible that a single PC does not completely isolate the entire stimulation effect on brain-wide activity. This in theory could be improved by additionally performing independent component analysis within the subspace formed by the top PCs. However, in the current data set, no poststimulation effects were observed outside of the first PC. Taken together, our brain-wide fMRI analysis approach was designed to be easily implemented and sensitive enough to detect stimulation-induced changes in activity across the brain, while also imposing as few assumptions as possible.
The marked sensory pattern emergence following THVTA-forepaw pairing showcases the utility of optogenetic-fMRI experimentation (Figure 3), as findings would have likely been unresolvable using methods that are focused on recording activity in one particular anatomical site. Importantly, our approach can easily be applied to examine the brain-wide consequences of the modulation of any particular neurocircuit node. Our data also suggest that by pairing a sensory stimulus with activation of the THVTA neurons produces an immediate enhancement of the sensory representation (even on the first pairing) while not affecting the rate of habituation to the sensory stimulus (Figures 4a–c). Our findings provide a foundation and roadmap for future studies that will examine the duration and/or permanence of the brain-wide sensory enhancement by THVTA stimulation as well as examine similar phenomena at the cellular level in a particular brain region using large-scale single-cell calcium imaging approaches.
It is well documented that isoflurane used during opto-fMRI experiments can significantly suppress evoked hemodynamic responses and do not fully reflect those observed during the awake state (Desai et al, 2011; Ferenczi et al, 2016). In the present study, animals were continuously infused with a cocktail composed of the α2-adrenergic receptor agonist dexmedetomidine and the paralytic agent pancuronium bromide supplemented with very light isoflurane anesthesia (0.5%) over the course of fMRI scan acquisition (Fukuda et al, 2013). Although this study attempts to minimize the effects of isoflurane by coupling its use with a sedative and paralytic agent, future studies are needed to replicate our findings in awake animals. We predict that we would see the same enhancement of the sensory representation to an even greater extent if these experiments were performed on awake animals. We also predict that we would still see an enhanced response, albeit to a slightly lesser extent, while using shorter optogenetic stimulation epochs during the THVTA-forepaw pairing, which would better resemble physiologically relevant dopaminergic signaling seen during normal reward processing. Future studies using unpaired stimulations or using another sensory input of another modality following pairing would also be ideal to further investigate whether explicit pairing of dopaminergic signaling and a sensory stimulus is necessary for this effect. It is also important to consider the results of a recent report showing that nonspecific stimulation of the VTA can induce reanimation from general anesthesia, including isoflurane (Solt et al, 2014), making it possible that enhanced response to sensory stimuli in the ChR2-eYFP group may be due to reduced depth of anesthesia. Although not recorded, there were no observable changes in autonomic responses (ie, heart rate, EtCO2, O2 saturation) that would indicate animals were becoming more conscious during photostimulation of THVTA neurons.
A hallmark feature of both adaptive learning and addiction is the enhanced salience that sensory stimuli acquire when paired with natural rewards or drugs of abuse. Consistent with this, direct activation of VTA dopaminergic neurons promotes stimulus-driven learning (Steinberg et al, 2013; Tsai et al, 2009; Witten et al, 2011), but can also result in addiction-like phenotypes in animals (Pascoli et al, 2015). It has been proposed that drugs of abuse and cues that predict these drugs, by increasing dopaminergic activity, will be processed as salient stimuli, thus promoting motivated behavior to obtain more drug (Robinson and Berridge, 2003). Although this is true for the initial drug experience, many have argued that over the course of addiction, neural control of drug-taking behaviors shifts to become dependent on non-dopaminergic mechanisms (Kalivas and Volkow, 2005). In support of this, human and animal studies have shown that extensive drug experience decreases the dopaminergic signaling in response to both drug and drug-associated cues over time despite increased salience and behavioral responses (ie, drug seeking/taking) to those cues (Volkow et al, 2014; Willuhn et al, 2014). By elucidating the brain-wide activity pattern evoked by THVTA stimulation paired with a sensory stimulus, we show that dopamine-driven plasticity in this experiment is not limited to sensory cortices, but instead recruits numerous extrasensory brain regions, even in the absence of further dopaminergic signaling (ie, as seen during the postpairing paw stimulation). Taken together, our findings reveal a putative mechanism whereby drugs and drug-associated cues become pathologically salient, particularly through dopamine-mediated recruitment of non-dopaminergic mechanisms during early drug use, such that these cues remain salient despite subsequent hypoactivity in the dopamine system as seen during later phases of addiction.
FUNDING AND DISCLOSURE
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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Acknowledgements
We thank members of Stuber and Shih laboratories for discussion. We also thank the UNC vector core for viral packaging, and the UNC Neuroscience Center Microscopy Core (P30 NS045892). This study was supported by the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation, the Foundation of Hope, the Klarman Family Foundation, and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (DA032750, DA038168) (to GDS), and UNC Neurology-BRIC startup funds, University Research Council, and SeeCure LLC (to YYIS). HKD was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (T32 Training Grant “Predoctoral Training in Addiction Science”, DA041104), NS007431, and UNC Graduate Training Program in Translational Medicine supported by HHMI. VMKN was supported by the UNC Neuroscience Center’s Helen Lyng White Fellowship in Neuroscience Research. JHJ was supported by MH104013. MD was supported by a Human Frontier Science Program Cross-Disciplinary Fellowship.
Author contributions
HKD, YYIS and GDS designed the experiments. HKD, JHJ, JAM, PAK, YCJK, and MD collected data. KD and IBW provided critical reagents. VMKN, HKD, WG, SL, YYIS, and GDS analyzed data. GDS, HKD, and VMKN wrote the manuscript with input from all authors.
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Decot, H., Namboodiri, V., Gao, W. et al. Coordination of Brain-Wide Activity Dynamics by Dopaminergic Neurons. Neuropsychopharmacol 42, 615–627 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/npp.2016.151
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