Encoding of the Intent to Drink Alcohol by the Prefrontal Cortex Is Blunted in Rats with a Family History of Excessive Drinking.
- Authors
- Linsenbardt, David N; Timme, Nicholas M; Lapish, Christopher C
- Year
- 2019
- Journal
- eNeuro
- PMID
- 31358511
- DOI
- 10.1523/ENEURO.0489-18.2019
- PMCID
- PMC6712204
The prefrontal cortex (PFC) plays a central role in guiding decision making, and its function is altered by alcohol use and an individual's innate risk for excessive alcohol drinking. The primary goal of this work was to determine how neural activity in the PFC guides the decision to drink. Towards this goal, the within-session changes in neural activity were measured from medial PFC (mPFC) of rats performing a drinking procedure that allowed them to consume or abstain from alcohol in a self-paced manner. Recordings were obtained from rats that either lacked or expressed an innate risk for excessive alcohol intake, Wistar or alcohol-preferring (P) rats, respectively. Wistar rats exhibited patterns of neural activity consistent with the intention to drink or abstain from drinking, whereas these patterns were blunted or absent in P rats. Collectively, these data indicate that neural activity patterns in mPFC associated with the intention to drink alcohol are influenced by innate risk for excessive alcohol drinking. This observation may indicate a lack of control over the decision to drink by this otherwise well-validated supervisory brain region.
Movement dissociates drinking versus non-drinking trials during fluid availability but not during stimulus (DS; i.e., cue light) presentation. A, Configuration of conditioning boxes used for cue-induced drinking/neurophysiology. Representative traces of head location within the conditioning box on drinking trials (B) and non-drinking trials (C) from a single session in a Wistar rat given alcohol solution. Illustrations at the top of all figure panels in D1βD4 illustrate the time course of stimuli presentation on each trial. Two seconds of βbaselineβ data precede the start of each trial, in which a light was illuminated for 2 s on one side of the two-sided chamber. A 1-s βdelayβ in which no stimuli were activated bridged the light cue and the initiation of sipper movement into the chamber. Sipper movement is represented by the two gray arrows, with the first arrow indicating sipper entry, and the second arrow indicating sipper removal. Fluid was readily available (only on the chamber side cued by the light) between the end of the sipper motor entry (first arrow) and the start of the sipper motor removal (second arrow). D1βD4, Mean (Β±SEM) log-transformed head movement speed changed significantly over time on drinking trials compared to non-drinking trials in P and Wistar rats on both alcohol and water sessions. Green bars denote drinking versus non-drinking trial differences (FDR-corrected rank-sum tests; p < 0.05).
LLM interpretation
This figure consists of schematic diagrams of the experimental setup (A), head location traces for drinking (B, red) and non-drinking (C, blue) trials, and four line graphs (D1βD4) showing mean log-transformed head movement speed over time. The graphs compare drinking versus non-drinking trials across two rat strains (Alcohol Preferring 'P' and Wistar) and two fluid conditions (Alcohol and Water). In all four graphs, movement speed is significantly lower during drinking trials compared to non-drinking trials specifically during the "Alcohol Access" or "Water Access" periods, as indicated by green significance markers (p < 0.05).
Task stimuli elicited varied responses in neurons on drinking trials versus non-drinking trials, illustrating the capacity to encode/predict future drinking. A, The z-scored time course of alterations in firing rate in each of the 179 neurons with significant firing rate alterations (ignoring drinking vs non-drinking status) sorted from lowest baseline firing rate (top) to highest baseline firing rate (bottom). B1βB3, PSTHs of three representative neurons recorded from a Wistar rat during the same alcohol access session; all displayed significant alterations in firing rate (see panel C). C, Approximately 1/3 of all neurons displayed significant alterations in firing rate versus baseline as measured by dΒ΄ (ignoring drinking versus non-drinking status). D, Significant individual neuron dΒ΄ scores on only drinking trials (red), only non-drinking trials (blue), and both drinking and non-drinking trials (purple). Square symbols represent data from Wistar rats and circle symbols represent data from P rats. The mean of dΒ΄ scores on drinking versus non-drinking trials from these subgroups was as expected (inset); drinking-responsive neurons had lower dΒ΄ values on non-drinking trials, and non-drinking-responsive neurons had lower dΒ΄ values on drinking trials (two-way ANOVA; F(2,679) = 38.03, p < 0.0001; asterisks in inset indicate significantly lower dΒ΄ scores from other two comparison groups (Sidakβs multiple comparisons adjusted p < 0.01). E, The proportion of neurons displaying significant dΒ΄ values (drinking/non-drinking/both) were similar between P and Wistar rats (Ο2 p β₯ 0.20). F, When data were evaluated independently of drinking status (top), a smaller proportion of neurons demonstrated selectivity to presentation of environmental stimuli (β33%) than when selectivity was assessed taking drinking/non-drinking trials into account (bottom, β43%).
LLM interpretation
This figure consists of multiple panels analyzing neuronal firing rates in response to task stimuli. Panel A is a heatmap showing z-scored firing rates for 179 neurons over time, while B1βB3 provide representative PSTHs and mean firing rate plots for three specific neurons. Panel C is a line plot of $d'$ scores across neurons, and Panel D is a scatter plot comparing $d'$ scores on drinking versus non-drinking trials for Wistar (squares) and P rats (circles), with an inset bar graph showing significant differences ($p < 0.0001$). Panels E and F use horizontal bar charts to compare the proportion of responsive neurons between rat strains and under different evaluation criteria.
P rats exhibit blunted trial encoding during alcohol sessions. A1βA3, Mean firing rate of three representative trial encoding neurons. Neurons in A1, A3 (Wistar/alcohol and P/water) encoded trial stimuli with increases in firing rate, whereas neuron in A2 (Wistar/alcohol) did so with decreases in firing rate. Neurons displayed significant heterogeneity in the magnitude and location of trial encoding. For example, neurons in A1, A3 displayed differences in the encoding of the sipper retracting. Also, A2, A3 encode both visual and auditory stimuli. On average, Wistar neurons encoded more information about trial stimuli than P during alcohol sessions (B), whereas no differences were observed between P and Wistar during water sessions (C). Data represent weighted mean Β± SE of the weighted mean. Green asterisks represent FDR-corrected differences between P and Wistar (p < 0.01). Open circles represent time bins where the ensemble of neurons did not produce significant encoding.
LLM interpretation
The figure consists of three line graphs (A1βA3) showing the smoothed spike counts of representative neurons and two line plots (B, C) showing mutual information over time. Panels A1βA3 compare real versus null trials across different rat groups, illustrating heterogeneous firing rate responses to stimuli. Panels B and C compare P (red) and Wistar (blue) rats, showing that P rats have significantly lower mutual information during alcohol sessions (indicated by green asterisks, p < 0.01), while no significant difference exists during water sessions.
P rats exhibit diminished drink encoding during alcohol sessions. A1βA3, Mean firing rate of three representative drink encoding neurons. Neurons in A1, A3 (Wistar/water and Wistar/alcohol) encoded drinking intent (pre-fluid availability drink encoding), whereas neuron in A2 (P/alcohol) encodes drinking only during fluid availability. As with trial encoding, neurons displayed significant heterogeneity in the magnitude and location of drink encoding. For example, neurons in A1βA3 displayed differences in the encoding of drinking during/following fluid removal. On average, Wistar neurons encoded more information about drinking/non-drinking than P during alcohol sessions (B), whereas inconsistent/transient differences were observed between P and Wistar during water sessions (C). Data represent weighted mean Β± SE of the weighted mean. Green asterisks represent FDR-corrected differences between P and Wistar (p < 0.01). Open circles represent time bins where the ensemble of neurons did not produce significant encoding.
LLM interpretation
This figure consists of three line graphs (A1βA3) showing smoothed spike counts for representative neurons and two time-series plots (B, C) showing mutual information (bits) for P and Wistar rats. In alcohol sessions (B), Wistar rats exhibit significantly higher mutual information during fluid access compared to P rats, indicated by green asterisks (p < 0.01). In water sessions (C), the differences between P and Wistar rats are inconsistent and transient.
mPFC neural activity patterns reflect the intention to drink alcohol in Wistar, but not P, rats. A, Illustrates neural trajectories in 3-dimensional Euclidean space on a single drinking (red), non-drinking (blue), and null trial (black). Filled green circles indicate the same time bin across each of the conditions, with the Euclidean distance between drinking (0.67) and non-drinking (0.59) trials from null used for statistical analyses in BβE. B, Populations of neurons in Wistar rats on alcohol access sessions encoded the intent to drink or not drink; differences in the pattern of firing between drinking/non-drinking trials were observed before alcohol access. C, Populations of neurons in P rats on alcohol access sessions encoded drinking/non-drinking but did not encode alcohol drinking intent. D, Populations of neurons in Wistar only transiently encoded water drinking. E, Populations of neurons in P failed to encode water drinking or water drinking intent. Data are presented as mean Β± SEM. Green lines represent FDR-corrected differences in Euclidean distance between drinking and non-drinking trials (p < 0.05).
LLM interpretation
This figure consists of a 3D trajectory plot (A) and four line graphs (BβE) comparing mPFC neural activity in Wistar and P rats. Panel A visualizes neural trajectories in Euclidean space for drinking (red), non-drinking (blue), and null (black) trials. Panels BβE plot the Euclidean distance from null trials over time during alcohol or water access, with green horizontal bars indicating statistically significant differences (p < 0.05, FDR-corrected) between drinking and non-drinking trials. Wistar rats show significant encoding of alcohol drinking intent (B) and transient water drinking (D), whereas P rats show no significant intent encoding for alcohol (C) or any encoding for water (E).
mPFC neural activity patterns more robustly encode alcohol-associated stimuli than Wistar during water sessions. Data presented in this figure are identical to those found in Figure 5D,E and are presented here to illustrate P versus Wistar differences. A, On drinking trials during water sessions, population of neurons in P rats better encoded alcohol-associated task/stimuli than Wistar rats, whereas there were no differences in encoding of task/stimuli between P and Wistar on non-drinking (water) trials (B). Data are presented as mean Β±SEM. Green lines represent FDR-corrected differences between P and Wistar (p < 0.05).
LLM interpretation
This figure consists of two line graphs (A and B) showing the Euclidean distance from null trials over time for P rats (red) and Wistar rats (blue) during drinking and non-drinking trials. In panel A (Drinking Trials), P rats exhibit a higher distance from null trials compared to Wistar rats, with green markers indicating FDR-corrected significant differences (p < 0.05). In panel B (Non-drinking Trials), the encoding patterns for both groups are more similar, with no significant differences indicated.
| Name | Type |
|---|---|
| Aberrant decision-making local | phenotype |
| alcohol | phenotype |
| alcohol-associated cues local | drug |
| alcohol associated stimuli local | drug |
| Alcohol-associated stimuli local | drug |
| alcohol extinction learning local | phenotype |
| alcohol history local | phenotype |
| alcohol intake decisions local | phenotype |
| Alcohol Use | phenotype |
| Alcohol Use Disorder | phenotype |
| animals | cohort |
| AUD | phenotype |
| Aversion-resistant drinking local | phenotype |
| brain circuits | anatomy |
| craving | phenotype |
| decision making | phenotype |
| Decision to drink alcohol local | phenotype |
| Devaluation insensitive drinking local | phenotype |
| Discriminative stimulus (DS+) local | phenotype |
| dorsal striatum | anatomy |
| drink-encoding local | phenotype |
| drinking | phenotype |
| drinking history | phenotype |
| drinking intent local | phenotype |
| drinking status | phenotype |
| DS | anatomy |
| Enhanced BOLD response to alcohol-associated stimuli local | phenotype |
| Enhanced stimuli-encoding during water sessions local | phenotype |
| excessive alcohol consumption | phenotype |
| Familial risk for Alcohol Use Disorder local | phenotype |
| Familial risk for AUD local | phenotype |
| familial risk of excessive drinking local | phenotype |
| family history negative | phenotype |
| family history of alcoholism | phenotype |
| Family history of excessive drinking local | phenotype |
| family history positive | phenotype |
| fluid | drug |
| frequency of alcohol use | phenotype |
| frontal-parietal circuits local | anatomy |
| genetic differences | phenotype |
| Habitual behavioral responding local | phenotype |
| head movement speed local | phenotype |
| Head movement speed local | phenotype |
| high drinking phenotype local | phenotype |
| High firing local | phenotype |
| human alcoholics | phenotype |
| increased familial risk local | phenotype |
| Indiana alcohol-preferring (P) rats local | cohort |
| intention to drink local | phenotype |
| intention to drink alcohol local | phenotype |
| Intent to drink alcohol local | phenotype |
| locomotor activity | phenotype |
| Low firing local | phenotype |
| medial prefrontal cortex | anatomy |
| Medium firing local | phenotype |
| Moderate alcohol history local | phenotype |
| movement speed local | phenotype |
| mPFC | anatomy |
| neuron firing rate local | phenotype |
| neurons | phenotype |
| Non-drinking local | phenotype |
| non-drinking behavior local | phenotype |
| Non-drinking behavior local | phenotype |
| non-drinking trial local | phenotype |
| Non-drinking trial local | phenotype |
| null trial local | cohort |
| Null trials local | cohort |
| Persistent alcohol-seeking behavior local | phenotype |
| P rats | cohort |
| prefrontal cortex | anatomy |
| rats | cohort |
| Real trials local | cohort |
| relapse | phenotype |
| responsive neurons local | anatomy |
| reward-based decision making | phenotype |
| reward-directed motor actions local | phenotype |
| Rodent cohort with family history of high alcohol consumption local | cohort |
| rodents | cohort |
| seeking phenotype local | phenotype |
| striatum | anatomy |
| subjects with excessive alcohol drinking local | cohort |
| trial-encoding local | phenotype |
| water | drug |
| Wistar rats | cohort |
| Wistars local | cohort |
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In this knowledge base
| Title | Year | PMID |
|---|---|---|
| Alcohol use disorder is associated with altered frontomedial phase-amplitude coupling strength during resting state. | 2026 | 41657495 |
External
| Title | Authors | Journal | Year | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alcohol use disorder is associated with altered frontomedial phase-amplitude coupling strength during resting state. | Richard CD et al. | β | 2026 | β |
| Predicting alcohol consumption and reward sensitivity using responses for natural sucrose reward in non-food-restricted rats. | Shultz E et al. | β | 2026 | β |
| Alcohol effects on associative and sensorimotor cortico-thalamo-basal ganglia circuits alter decision making and alcohol intake. | Lovinger DM | β | 2025 | β |
| Effect of acute alcohol consumption in a novel rodent model of decision-making. | Giri A et al. | β | 2025 | β |
| Repeated alcohol drinking in mice is associated with bidirectional alterations in corticostriatal coherence. | Ardinger CE et al. | β | 2025 | β |
| Alcohol Modulates Frontal Cortex and BLA Network States Which Correlate with Future Voluntary Alcohol Consumption. | DiLeo A et al. | β | 2024 | β |
| Impulsive Choices Emerge When the Anterior Cingulate Cortex Fails to Encode Deliberative Strategies. | White SM et al. | β | 2024 | β |
| Neural Activity in the Anterior Insula at Drinking Onset and Licking Relates to Compulsion-Like Alcohol Consumption. | Starski P et al. | β | 2024 | β |
| Proactive Versus Reactive Control Strategies Differentially Mediate Alcohol Drinking in Male Wistars and P Rats. | Morningstar MD et al. | β | 2024 | β |
| Distinct cortico-striatal compartments drive competition between adaptive and automatized behavior. | Barnett WH et al. | β | 2023 | β |
| Structured tracking of alcohol reinforcement (STAR) for basic and translational alcohol research. | Brown AR et al. | β | 2023 | β |
| The role of beta- and alpha-adrenergic receptors on alcohol drinking. | De Oliveira Sergio T et al. | β | 2023 | β |
| Using lickometry to infer differential contributions of salience network regions during compulsion-like alcohol drinking. | Starski PA et al. | β | 2023 | β |
| Compulsive alcohol drinking in rodents is associated with altered representations of behavioral control and seeking in dorsal medial prefrontal cortex. | Timme NM et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Neurotensin orchestrates valence assignment in the amygdala. | Li H et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| The rodent medial prefrontal cortex and associated circuits in orchestrating adaptive behavior under variable demands. | Howland JG et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Integration of value and action in medial prefrontal neural systems. | Kaminska B et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| Alcohol-preferring P rats exhibit aversion-resistant drinking of alcohol adulterated with quinine. | Timme NM et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| A Method to Present and Analyze Ensembles of Information Sources. | Timme NM et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Constitutive Genetic Deletion of <i>Hcn1</i> Increases Alcohol Preference during Adolescence. | Salling MC et al. | β | 2020 | β |