scholarly journals The effect of dopamine transporter blockade on optical self-stimulation: behavioral and computational evidence for parallel processing in brain reward circuitry

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Trujillo-Pisanty ◽  
Kent Conover ◽  
Pavel Solis ◽  
Daniel Palacios ◽  
Peter Shizgal

AbstractThe neurobiological study of reward was launched by the discovery of intracranial self-stimulation (ICSS). Subsequent investigation of this phenomenon provided the initial link between reward-seeking behavior and dopaminergic neurotransmission. We re-evaluated this relationship by psychophysical, pharmacological, optogenetic, and computational means. In rats working for direct, optical activation of midbrain dopamine neurons, we varied the strength and opportunity cost of the stimulation and measured time allocation, the proportion of trial time devoted to reward pursuit. We found that the dependence of time allocation on the strength and cost of stimulation was similar formally to that observed when electrical stimulation of the medial forebrain bundle served as the reward. When the stimulation is strong and cheap, the rats devote almost all their time to reward pursuit; time allocation falls off as stimulation strength is decreased and/or its opportunity cost is increased. A 3D plot of time allocation versus stimulation strength and cost produces a surface resembling the corner of a plateau (the “reward mountain”). We show that dopamine-transporter blockade shifts the mountain along both the strength and cost axes in rats working for optical activation of midbrain dopamine neurons. In contrast, the same drug shifted the mountain uniquely along the opportunity-cost axis when rats worked for electrical MFB stimulation in a prior study. Dopamine neurons are an obligatory stage in the dominant model of ICSS, which positions them at a key nexus in the final common path for reward seeking. This model fails to provide a cogent account for the differential effect of dopamine transporter blockade on the reward mountain. Instead, we propose that midbrain dopamine neurons and neurons with non-dopaminergic, MFB axons constitute parallel limbs of brain-reward circuitry that ultimately converge on the final-common path for the evaluation and pursuit of rewards.Author summaryTo succeed in the struggle for survival and reproductive success, animals must make wise choices about which goals to pursue and how much to pay to attain them. How does the brain make such decisions and adjust behaviour accordingly? An animal model that has long served to address this question entails delivery of rewarding brain stimulation. When the probe is positioned appropriately in the brain, rats will work indefatigably to trigger such stimulation. Dopamine neurons play a crucial role in this phenomenon. The dominant model of the brain circuitry responsible for the reward-seeking behavior treats these cells as a gateway through which the reward-generating brain signals must pass. Here, we challenge this idea on the basis of an experiment in which the dopamine neurons were activated selectively and directly. Mathematical modeling of the results argues for a new view of the structure of brain reward circuitry. On this view, the pathway(s) in which the dopamine neurons are embedded is one of a set of parallel channels that process reward signals in the brain. To achieve a full understanding of how goals are evaluated, selected and pursued, the full set of channels must be identified and investigated.

10.1038/nn920 ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 5 (10) ◽  
pp. 971-978 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan L. Ingram ◽  
Balakrishna M. Prasad ◽  
Susan G. Amara

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kauê Machado Costa ◽  
Daniela Schenkel ◽  
Jochen Roeper

AbstractHeterozygous mice that express Cre-recombinase under the dopamine transporter promoter (DAT-Cre knock in mice, or KI) are widely used for targeting midbrain dopamine neurons, under the assumption that their constitutive physiology is not affected. We report here that these mice display striking sex-dependent behavioral and molecular differences in relation to wildtypes (WT). Male and female KI mice were constitutively hyperactive, and male KI mice showed attenuated hyperlocomotor responses to amphetamine. In contrast, female KIs displayed a marked reduction in locomotion (“calming” effect) in response to the same dose of amphetamine. Furthermore, male and female DAT-Cre KI mice showed opposing differences in reinforcement learning, with females showing faster conditioning and males showing slower extinction. Other behavioral variables, including working memory and novelty preference, were not changed compared to WT. These effects were paralleled by differences in striatal DAT expression that disproportionately affected female KI mice. Our findings reveal clear limitations of the DAT-Cre line that must be considered when using this model.


2001 ◽  
Vol 18 (6) ◽  
pp. 649-663 ◽  
Author(s):  
Åsa Wallén ◽  
Diogo S. Castro ◽  
Rolf H. Zetterström ◽  
Mattias Karlén ◽  
Lars Olson ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Akash Guru ◽  
Changwoo Seo ◽  
Ryan J. Post ◽  
Durga S. Kullakanda ◽  
Julia A. Schaffer ◽  
...  

Journeys to novel and familiar destinations employ different navigational strategies. The first drive to a new restaurant relies on map-based planning, but after repeated trips the drive is automatic and guided by local environmental cues1,2. Ventral striatal dopamine rises during navigation toward goals and reflects the spatial proximity and value of goals3, but the impact of experience, the neural mechanisms, and the functional significance of dopamine ramps are unknown4,5. Here, we used fiber photometry6–8 to record the evolution of activity in midbrain dopamine neurons as mice learned a variety of reward-seeking tasks, starting recordings before training had commenced and continuing daily for weeks. When mice navigated through space toward a goal, robust ramping activity in dopamine neurons appeared immediately – after the first rewarded trial on the first training day in completely naïve animals. In this task spatial cues were available to guide behavior, and although ramps were strong at first, they gradually faded away as training progressed. If instead mice learned to run a fixed distance on a stationary wheel for reward, a task that required an internal model of progress toward the goal, strong dopamine ramps persisted indefinitely. In a passive task in which a visible cue and reward moved together toward the mouse, ramps appeared and then faded over several days, but in an otherwise identical task with a stationary cue and reward ramps never appeared. Our findings provide strong evidence that ramping activity in midbrain dopamine neurons reflects the use of a cognitive map9,10 – an internal model of the distance already covered and the remaining distance until the goal is reached. We hypothesize that dopamine ramps may be used to reinforce locations on the way to newly-discovered rewards in order to build a graded ventral striatal value landscape for guiding routine spatial behavior.


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