Litcius/Paper detail

Dysfunction in primate dorsolateral prefrontal area 46 affects motivation and anxiety

Christian M. Wood, Rana Banai Tizkar, Martina Fort, Xinhu Zhang, Kevin G. Mulvihill, N. Y. Liao, Gemma J. Cockcroft, Lauren McIver, Stephen J. Sawiak, Angela Roberts

2025Science11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) is a higher-order brain structure targeted for noninvasive stimulation for treatment-resistant depression. Nonetheless, its causal role in emotion regulation is unknown. We discovered that inactivating dlPFC area 46 in marmosets blunts appetitive motivation and heightens threat reactivity. The effects were asymmetric-dependent on the left hemisphere only-and were mediated through projections to pregenual cingulate area 32. The antidepressant ketamine blocked the appetitive motivational deficits through mechanisms within subcallosal cingulate area 25, an area linked with treatment success in dlPFC noninvasive stimulation. Our data uncover an integrated prefrontal network for area 46 that contributes to positive and negative emotion regulation that may be core to our understanding of symptoms and therapeutic strategies for treatment-resistant depression and anxiety.

Topics & Concepts

Dorsolateral prefrontal cortexNeurosciencePsychologyPrefrontal cortexDorsolateralAnxietyStimulationAntidepressantAnterior cingulate cortexCognitionHippocampusPsychiatryFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesNeural dynamics and brain functionNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies