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Publication : The amygdala instructs insular feedback for affective learning.

First Author  Kargl D Year  2020
Journal  Elife Volume  9
PubMed ID  33216712 Mgi Jnum  J:359387
Mgi Id  MGI:6477114 Doi  10.7554/eLife.60336
Citation  Kargl D, et al. (2020) The amygdala instructs insular feedback for affective learning. Elife 9
abstractText  Affective responses depend on assigning value to environmental predictors of threat or reward. Neuroanatomically, this affective value is encoded at both cortical and subcortical levels. However, the purpose of this distributed representation across functional hierarchies remains unclear. Using fMRI in mice, we mapped a discrete cortico-limbic loop between insular cortex (IC), central amygdala (CE), and nucleus basalis of Meynert (NBM), which decomposes the affective value of a conditioned stimulus (CS) into its salience and valence components. In IC, learning integrated unconditioned stimulus (US)-evoked bodily states into CS valence. In turn, CS salience in the CE recruited these CS representations bottom-up via the cholinergic NBM. This way, the CE incorporated interoceptive feedback from IC to improve discrimination of CS valence. Consequently, opto-/chemogenetic uncoupling of hierarchical information flow disrupted affective learning and conditioned responding. Dysfunctional interactions in the IC<-->CE/NBM network may underlie intolerance to uncertainty, observed in autism and related psychiatric conditions.
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