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Publication : Cholinergic interneurons mediate cocaine extinction in male mice through plasticity across medium spiny neuron subtypes.

First Author  Fleming W Year  2022
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  39
Issue  9 Pages  110874
PubMed ID  35649378 Mgi Jnum  J:337369
Mgi Id  MGI:7294030 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2022.110874
Citation  Fleming W, et al. (2022) Cholinergic interneurons mediate cocaine extinction in male mice through plasticity across medium spiny neuron subtypes. Cell Rep 39(9):110874
abstractText  Cholinergic interneurons (ChINs) in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) have been implicated in the extinction of drug associations, as well as related plasticity in medium spiny neurons (MSNs). However, since most previous work relied on artificial manipulations, whether endogenous acetylcholine signaling relates to drug associations is unclear. Moreover, despite great interest in the opposing effects of dopamine on MSN subtypes, whether ChIN-mediated effects vary by MSN subtype is also unclear. Here, we find that high endogenous acetylcholine event frequency correlates with greater extinction of cocaine-context associations across male mice. Additionally, extinction is associated with a weakening of glutamatergic synapses across MSN subtypes. Manipulating ChIN activity bidirectionally controls both the rate of extinction and the associated plasticity at MSNs. Our findings indicate that NAc ChINs mediate drug-context extinction by reducing glutamatergic synaptic strength across MSN subtypes, and that natural variation in acetylcholine signaling may contribute to individual differences in extinction.
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