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Dorsal Raphe 5-HT Neurons Utilize, But Do Not Generate, Negative Aversive Prediction Errors.

Rachel A WalkerRebecca L SuthardTaylor N PerisonNora M SheehanCaitlin C DwyerJillian K LeeEghosa K EnabuleleMadelyn H RayMichael A McDannald
Published in: eNeuro (2022)
The dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) contains the largest population of serotonin (5-HT) neurons in the central nervous system. 5-HT, synthesized via tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (Tph2), is a widely functioning neuromodulator implicated in fear learning. Here, we sought to investigate whether DRN 5-HT is necessary to reduce fear via negative prediction error (-PE). Using male and female TPH2-cre rats, DRN tph2+ cells were selectively deleted via cre-caspase (rAAV5-Flex-taCasp3-TEVp) in experiment 1. Rats then underwent fear discrimination during which three cues were associated with unique foot shock probabilities: safety p  = 0.00, uncertainty p  = 0.375, and danger p  = 1.00. Rats then received selective extinction to the uncertainty cue, a behavioral manipulation designed to probe -PE. Deleting DRN tph2+ cells had no impact on initial discrimination but slowed selective extinction. In experiment 2, we used a within-subjects optogenetic inhibition design to causally implicate DRN tph2+ cells in prediction error signaling. Male and female TPH2-cre rats received intra-DRN infusions of cre-dependent halorhodopsin (rAAV5-Ef1a-DIO-eNpHR3.0-eYFP) or cre-YFP. DRN tph2+ cells were inhibited specifically during the time of prediction error or a control period. Illumination during either positive prediction error (+PE) or control periods had no impact on fear to the uncertainty cue. Inhibition of DRN tph2+ cells at the time of -PE did not impact immediate fear, but facilitated selective extinction in postillumination sessions. Together, these results demonstrate a role for DRN tph2+ cells in using, but not generating, -PE to weaken cue-shock associations.
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