Cholinergic afferents to the ventral tegmental area (VTA) contribute substantially to the regulation of motivated behaviors and the rewarding properties of nicotine. These actions are believed to involve connections with dopamine (DA) neurons projecting to the nucleus accumbens (NAc). However, this direct synaptic link has never been investigated, nor is it known whether cholinergic inputs innervate other populations of DA and GABA neurons, including those projecting to the prefrontal cortex (PFC). We addressed these questions using electron microscopic analysis of retrograde tract-tracing and immunocytochemistry for the vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT) and for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and GABA. In tissue labeled for TH, VAChT+ terminals frequently synapsed onto DA mesoaccumbens neurons but only seldom contacted DA mesoprefrontal cells. In tissue labeled for GABA, one third of VAChT+ terminals innervated GABA-labeled dendrites, including both mesoaccumbens and mesoprefrontal populations. VAChT+ synapses onto DA and mesoaccumbens neurons were more commonly of the asymmetric (presumed excitatory) morphological type, whereas VAChT+ synapses onto GABA cells were more frequently symmetric (presumed inhibitory or modulatory). These findings suggest that cholinergic inputs to the VTA mediate complex synaptic actions, with a major portion of this effect likely to involve an excitatory influence on DA mesoaccumbens neurons. As such, the results suggest that natural and drug rewards operating through cholinergic afferents to the VTA have a direct synaptic link to the mesoaccumbens DA neurons that modulate approach behaviors.
Keywordsdopamine; GABA; acetylcholine; nucleus accumbens; prefrontal cortex; ultrastructure Cholinergic projections to the substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area (VTA) derive mainly from the pedunculopontine (PPT) and laterodorsal (LDT) tegmentum (Woolf and Butcher, 1986;Hallanger and Wainer, 1988;Lavoie and Parent, 1994;Oakman et al., 1995;Forster and Blaha, 2000) and provide an important substrate for the reinforcing properties of nicotine and the pathophysiology of addiction as well as mental disorders such as schizophrenia (Nisell et al., 1994;Yeomans, 1995;Nestler, 2001;Corrigall et al., 2002;Mansvelder and McGehee, 2002;Dani, 2003). Within the VTA, acetylcholine and agonists of nicotinic and muscarinic receptors typically increase the activity of dopamine (DA) and GABA cells, promote bursting, and phasically increase efflux in terminal regions (Corrigall et al., 1994;Nisell et al., 1994;Westerink et al., 1996;Westerink et al., 1998;Forster and Blaha, 2000;Gronier et al., 2000;Yin and French, 2000 Burst firing in DA neurons provides an important physiological mechanism for signaling behaviorally relevant events and enhancing DA release in target areas (Suaud-Chagny et al., 1992;Schultz et al., 1997;Paladini and Tepper, 1999;Redgrave et al., 1999). Hence, cholinergic inputs from the mesopontine tegmentum may provide an important source of salience information for DA neuron...