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Journal ArticleDOI

Differential effects of mesocortical, mesolimbic, and mesostriatal dopamine depletion on spontaneous, conditioned, and drug-induced locomotor activity

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TLDR
Results differentiate the role of PFC, NAC, and CPu dopamine in spontaneous, conditioned, and drug-induced locomotor activity and further implicate dopaminergic mechanisms of the NAC in the magnitude of the behavioural response to incentive stimuli.
Abstract
Groups of rats with 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) lesions of either the medial prefrontal cortex (PFC), nucleus accumbens (NAC), or caudate putamen (CPu) were given daily tests for locomotor activity in photocell cages while food deprived. Two separate groups of NAC-lesioned rats were prepared with either large [NACT (90% NAC dopamine depletion)] or partial [NACP (67% NAC dopamine depletion)] lesions. NACT rats were spontaneously hypoactive whereas NACP rats were hyperactive compared with sham-operated controls. PFC-lesioned rats were also hyperactive compared to their respective controls. Spontaneous locomotor activity in CPu-lesioned rats did not differ from shams. When daily food supplements were paired with the photocell cages, all subjects developed a conditioned locomotor response. During the first few days of conditioning, the response to this conditioning procedure was markedly greater in the NACP group whereas the response in the NACT group was unaffected initially and actually enhanced during the latter days of testing. the locomotor response to the conditioning procedure was unaffected in either the PFC- or CPu-lesioned groups. Both the NACT and NACP lesions attenuated the locomotor response to 1.5 mg/kg d -amphetamine sulphate IP, and the NACT group showed a supersensitive response to 0.1 mg/kg apomorphine HCl SC. PFC or CPu 6-OHDA lesions did not alter the response to either drug. These results differentiate the role of PFC, NAC, and CPu dopamine in spontaneous, conditioned, and drug-induced locomotor activity and further implicate dopaminergic mechanisms of the NAC in the magnitude of the behavioral response to incentive stimuli.

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The role of nucleus accumbens dopamine in motivated behavior: a unifying interpretation with special reference to reward-seeking

TL;DR: The present analysis suggests that NAS DA plays an important role in sensorimotor integrations that facilitate flexible approach responses, and offers the following interpretation for the finding that both conditioned and unconditioned aversive stimuli stimulate DA release in the NAS: NAS DA invigorates approach responses toward 'safety'.
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Dopamine and the regulation of cognition and attention

TL;DR: DA has to be considered as a key neuroregulator which contributes to behavioral adaptation and to anticipatory processes necessary for preparing voluntary action consequent upon intention, and it can be suggested that a correlation exists between DA innervation and expression of cognitive capacities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pathological gambling is linked to reduced activation of the mesolimbic reward system

TL;DR: A reduction of ventral striatal and ventromedial prefrontal activation in the pathological gamblers was observed that was negatively correlated with gambling severity, linking hypoactivation of these areas to disease severity.
Journal ArticleDOI

The correlative triad among aging, dopamine, and cognition: current status and future prospects.

TL;DR: Research examining the correlative triad among adult age, DA, and cognition has found strong support for the view that age-related DA losses are associated with age- related cognitive deficits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Behavioral functions of the mesolimbic dopaminergic system: an affective neuroethological perspective.

TL;DR: The affective neuroethological perspective presented here views the ML-DA system in terms of its ability to activate an instinctual emotional appetitive state (SEEKING) evolved to induce organisms to search for all varieties of life-supporting stimuli and to avoid harms.
References
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