Dopamine D2 Modulation of Sign and Goal Tracking in Rats.
Juan Carlos Lopez, Rose-Marie Karlsson, Patricio O'Donnell
Index: Neuropsychopharmacology 40 , 2096-102, (2015)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
In Pavlovian conditioning, sign- and goal-tracking behaviors represent different approaches towards the conditioned stimulus. These behavioral patterns have been associated with predictive or incentive properties of the conditioned stimulus, with a crucial involvement of the mesolimbic dopamine system. As it is possible that sign tracking behavior is more sensitive to dopamine modulation, we evaluated the dopamine-dependence of sign- and goal-tracking behavior. We assessed responses to both a D2 agonist and an antagonist, and tested performance in a behavioral paradigm known to activate dopamine projections and in an animal model that affects mesolimbic and mesocortical function. Sign trackers displayed a greater sensitivity to a D2 agonist and smaller prepulse inhibition of the acoustic startle response than goal trackers, suggesting a reduced inhibitory ability. In addition, a neonatal ventral hippocampal lesion resulted in the loss of incentive salience of cues in sign trackers. Overall, these data indicate that sign-tracking behavior is more heavily controlled by dopamine than goal tracking.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
Aptamer-based polyvalent ligands for regulated cell attachment on the hydrogel surface.
2015-04-13
[Biomacromolecules 16(4) , 1382-9, (2015)]
Assembly and structure of Lys33-linked polyubiquitin reveals distinct conformations.
2015-04-15
[Biochem. J. 467(2) , 345-52, (2015)]
2015-05-01
[Biochem. J. 467(3) , 425-38, (2015)]
2015-04-01
[J. Virol. 89(8) , 4421-33, (2015)]
DNase II-dependent DNA digestion is required for DNA sensing by TLR9.
2015-01-01
[Nat. Commun. 6 , 5853, (2015)]