Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Too little and too much: medial prefrontal functional inhibition impairs early acquisition of operant reversal learning, whereas medial prefrontal disinhibition impairs established serial-reversal performance in rats

Renstrom, Jacco G.; Taylor, Charlie J. L.; Grasmeder Allen, Rachel; Loayza, Joanna; O'Hara, Luke; von Heimendahl, Moritz; Deiana, Serena; Moran, Paula M.; Stevenson, Carl W.; Maggi, Silvia G.; Bast, Tobias

Too little and too much: medial prefrontal functional inhibition impairs early acquisition of operant reversal learning, whereas medial prefrontal disinhibition impairs established serial-reversal performance in rats Thumbnail


Authors

Jacco G. Renstrom

Rachel Grasmeder Allen

Joanna Loayza

Luke O'Hara

Moritz von Heimendahl

Serena Deiana

Paula M. Moran



Abstract

Schizophrenia has been linked to hypofrontality (reduced prefrontal activation) and neural disinhibition (reduced GABAergic inhibition) within the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC), as well as reversal learning deficits. Interestingly, whilst reversal learning has been strongly linked to the orbitofrontal cortex, research suggests that the primate dlPFC - or its rodent analogue, the medial PFC (mPFC) - is less important for this process. Nevertheless, we hypothesized that the mPFC may be required for reversal learning if the reversal is particularly demanding. Furthermore, even if the mPFC is not required, mPFC disinhibition may impair reversals, because it may disrupt processing in mPFC projection sites. To test this, we induced mPFC functional inhibition and disinhibition in rats, using microinfusions of the GABA-A receptor agonist muscimol or antagonist picrotoxin, respectively, and examined the impact on early and serial reversals on a food-reinforced two-lever discrimination task. Using classical performance measures and Bayesian trial-by-trial strategy analysis, we found that mPFC functional inhibition impaired early, but not serial, reversals by increasing perseveration and impairing exploratory (lose-shift) behavior. In contrast, disinhibition impaired serial reversals, which was associated with reduction in both exploratory (lose-shift) and exploitative (win-stay) behavior. These findings suggest that mPFC hypoactivation and disinhibition disrupt distinct aspects of reversal learning by different mechanisms.

Citation

Renstrom, J. G., Taylor, C. J. L., Grasmeder Allen, R., Loayza, J., O'Hara, L., von Heimendahl, M., Deiana, S., Moran, P. M., Stevenson, C. W., Maggi, S. G., & Bast, T. (2025). Too little and too much: medial prefrontal functional inhibition impairs early acquisition of operant reversal learning, whereas medial prefrontal disinhibition impairs established serial-reversal performance in rats

Working Paper Type Preprint
Online Publication Date Feb 13, 2025
Publication Date Feb 13, 2025
Deposit Date Feb 13, 2025
Publicly Available Date Feb 14, 2025
DOI https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.02.10.637529
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/45312429
Publisher URL https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.02.10.637529v2