Significance
Clinical evidence suggests that adolescents engage in dangerous activities despite understanding the risks involved, questioning the theory of decreased top-down control of the immature prefrontal cortex promoting adolescent disinhibited behaviors. In the present study, we report that adolescent rats show a much higher degree of inflexible behavior when making decisions under conflict compared to adults. Unexpectedly, we identified a lower excitability of layer 5 pyramidal neurons in the anterior insular cortex (AIC) of adolescent rats and smaller synaptic glutamatergic inputs to these cells but no difference in layer 5 prefrontal cortex pyramidal neurons. Chemogenetic activation of AIC neurons reduced persistent reward-seeking despite punishment, suggesting that the delayed maturation of the insula may promote inflexible reward-related behaviors in adolescent rats.