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Striatal dopamine D2 receptors regulate effort but not value-based decision making and alter the dopaminergic encoding of cost

Authors :
Filla, Ina
Bailey, Matthew
Schipani, Elke
Winiger, Vanessa
Mezias, Chris
Balsam, Peter
Simpson, Eleanor
Source :
Neuropsychopharmacology; October 2018, Vol. 43 Issue: 11 p2180-2189, 10p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Deficits in goal-directed motivation represent a debilitating symptom for many patients with schizophrenia. Impairments in motivation can arise from deficits in processing information about effort and or value, disrupting effective cost-benefit decision making. We have previously shown that upregulated dopamine D2 receptor expression within the striatum (D2R-OE mice) decreases goal-directed motivation. Here, we determine the behavioral and neurochemical mechanisms behind this deficit. Female D2R-OE mice were tested in several behavioral paradigms including recently developed tasks that independently assess the impact of Valueor Effortmanipulations on cost-benefit decision making. In vivo microdialysis was used to measure extracellular dopamine in the striatum during behavior. In a value-based choice task, D2R-OE mice show normal sensitivity to changes in reward value and used reward value to guide their actions. In an effort-based choice task, D2R-OE mice evaluate the cost of increasing the number of responsesgreater relative to the effort cost of longer duration responsescompared to controls. This shift away from choosing to repeatedly execute a response is accompanied by a dampening of extracellular dopamine in the striatum during goal-directed behavior. In the ventral striatum, extracellular dopamine level negatively correlates with response cost in controls, but this relationship is lost in D2R-OE mice. These results show that D2R signaling in the striatum, as observed in some patients with schizophrenia, alters the relationship between effort expenditure and extracellular dopamine. This dysregulation produces motivation deficits that are specific to effort but not value-based decision making, paralleling the effort-based motivational deficits observed in schizophrenia.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0893133X and 1740634X
Volume :
43
Issue :
11
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Neuropsychopharmacology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs50641252
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41386-018-0159-9