Brain Stimulation (May 2020)

Frequency-dependent electrical stimulation of fimbria-fornix preferentially affects the mesolimbic dopamine system or prefrontal cortex

  • Cornelia Helbing,
  • Frank Angenstein

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
pp. 753 – 764

Abstract

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Background: The fimbria/fornix fiber system is an essential part of the hippocampal-VTA loop, and therefore activities that are propagated through this fiber system control the activity of the mesolimbic dopamine system. Objectives/hypothesis: We hypothesized that stimulation of the fimbria/fornix with an increasing number of electrical pulses would cause increasing activity of the mesolimbic dopamine system, which coincides with concurrent changes in neuronal activities in target regions of the mesolimbic dopaminergic system. Methods: Right fimbria/fornix fibers were electrically stimulated with different pulse protocols. Stimulus-induced changes in neuronal activities were visualized with BOLD-fMRI, whereas stimulus-induced release of dopamine, as measured for the activity of the mesolimbic dopamine system, was determined in the nucleus accumbens with in vivo fast-scan cyclic voltammetry. Results: Dependent on the protocol, electrical fimbria/fornix stimulation caused BOLD responses in various targets of the mesolimbic dopamine system. Stimulation in the low theta frequency range (5 Hz) triggered significant BOLD responses mainly in the hippocampal formation, infralimbic cortex, and septum. Stimulation in the beta frequency range (20 Hz) caused additional activation in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), nucleus accumbens, striatum, and VTA. Stimulation in the high-gamma frequency range (100 Hz) caused further activation in the hippocampus proper and mPFC. The strong activation in the mPFC during 100 Hz stimulations depended not only on the number of pulses but also on the frequency. Thus, short bursts of 5 or 20 high-frequency pulses caused stronger activation in the mPFC than continuous 5 or 20 Hz pulses. In contrast, high-frequency burst fimbria/fornix stimulation did not further activate the mesolimbic dopamine system when compared to continuous 5 or 20 Hz pulse stimulation. Conclusions: There exists a frequency-dependent dissociation between BOLD responses and activation of the dopaminergic system. Low frequencies were more efficient to activate the mesolimbic dopamine system, whereas high frequencies were more efficient to trigger BOLD responses in target regions of the mesolimbic dopamine system, particularly the mPFC.

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