Dopamine in the basal amygdala signals salient somatosensory events during fear learning

2019 
The amygdala is a brain area critical for the formation of threat memories. However, the nature of the teaching signal(s) that drive plasticity in the amygdala are still under debate. Here, we use optogenetic methods to investigate whether dopamine release in the amygdala contributes to fear learning. Antero- and retrograde labeling showed that a sparse, and relatively evenly distributed population of ventral tegmental area (VTA) neurons projects to the basal amygdala (BA). In-vivo optrode recordings in behaving mice showed that many VTA neurons, amongst them putative dopamine neurons, are excited by footshocks. Correspondingly, in-vivo fiber photometry of dopamine in the BA revealed robust dopamine concentration transients upon footshock presentation. Finally, silencing VTA dopamine neurons, or their axon terminals in the BA during the footshock, reduced the extent of threat memory retrieval one day later. Thus, VTA dopamine neurons projecting to the BA code for the saliency of the footshock event, and the resulting dopamine release in the BA facilitates threat memory formation.
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