Scientific Reports (Jul 2025)

Unique nicotinic responses are present in distinct subtypes of mouse medial prefrontal layer V pyramidal neurons

  • Ashutosh V. Patel,
  • Anthony Nguyen,
  • Ashley A. Geremia,
  • Donia Zeng,
  • Pietro Paletta,
  • Elena Choleris,
  • Craig D. C. Bailey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-10465-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 21

Abstract

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Abstract The neurotransmitter acetylcholine supports goal-directed cognitive functions via activation of its nicotinic and muscarinic classes of receptors within the prefrontal cortex. These receptors are expressed on pyramidal neurons located within layer V of the prefrontal cortex, which integrate afferent signals and contribute toward cognitive circuits via efferent projections to cortical and subcortical targets. Using whole-cell electrophysiology, retrograde labelling, and neuron reconstruction in the juvenile mouse prefrontal cortex, we identified three unique nicotinic receptor responses that are present in distinct subtypes of layer V pyramidal neurons. Broadly, we observed responses mediated by (i) postsynaptic α7 nicotinic receptors in burst-firing neurons that project to the contralateral cortex, (ii) a combination of postsynaptic α7 and presynaptic β2* nicotinic receptors in burst-firing neurons that project to the nucleus accumbens, and (iii) postsynaptic β2* nicotinic receptors in regular-firing neurons that project to the ventromedial thalamus. These findings provide insight into a mechanism by which nicotinic acetylcholine neurotransmission may support cognitive functions via the unique receptor isoform responses found in distinct efferent projections from this brain region.