Chemogenetic dissection of the primate prefronto-subcortical pathways for working memory and decision-making

2021 
The primate prefrontal cortex (PFC) is situated at the core of higher brain functions by linking and cooperating with the caudate nucleus (CD) and mediodorsal thalamus (MD) via neural circuits. However, the distinctive roles of these prefronto-subcortical pathways remain elusive. Combining in vivo neuronal projection mapping with chemogenetic synaptic silencing, we reversibly dissected key pathways from PFC to the CD and MD individually in single monkeys. We found that silencing the bilateral PFC-MD projections, but not the PFC-CD projections, impaired performance in a spatial working memory task. Conversely, silencing the unilateral PFC-CD projection, but not the PFC-MD projection, altered preference in a free-choice task. These results revealed dissociable roles of the prefronto-subcortical pathways in working memory and decision-making, representing the technical advantage of imaging-guided pathway-selective chemogenetic manipulation for dissecting neural circuits underlying cognitive functions in primates.
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