Dissociation of dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens from intracranial
self-stimulation
by
Garris PA, Kilpatrick M, Bunin MA, Michael D, Walker QD, Wightman RM
Department of Biological Sciences,
Illinois State University,
Normal
61790-4120, USA.
Nature 1999 Mar 4; 398(6722):67-9
ABSTRACT
Mesolimbic dopamine-releasing neurons appear to be important in the brain
reward system. One behavioural paradigm that supports this hypothesis is
intracranial self-stimulation (ICS), during which animals repeatedly press a
lever to stimulate their own dopamine-releasing neurons electrically. Here we
study dopamine release from dopamine terminals in the nucleus accumbens core and
shell in the brain by using rapid-responding voltammetric microsensors during
electrical stimulation of dopamine cell bodies in the ventral tegmental
area/substantia nigra brain regions. In rats in which stimulating electrode
placement failed to elicit dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens, ICS
behaviour was not learned. In contrast, ICS was acquired when stimulus trains
evoked extracellular dopamine in either the core or the shell of the nucleus
accumbens. In animals that could learn ICS, experimenter-delivered stimulation
always elicited dopamine release. In contrast, extracellular dopamine was rarely
observed during ICS itself. Thus, although activation of mesolimbic
dopamine-releasing neurons seems to be a necessary condition for ICS, evoked
dopamine release is actually diminished during ICS. Dopamine may therefore be a
neural substrate for novelty or reward expectation rather than reward itself.
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