Montoya Estrella R, Bos Peter A, Terburg David, Rosenberger Lisa A, van Honk Jack
Department of Experimental Psychology, Utrecht University, 3584 CS Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Department of Experimental Psychology, Utrecht University, 3584 CS Utrecht, The Netherlands; Department of Psychiatry, University of Cape Town, Cape Town 7925, South Africa.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2014 Sep;47:31-42. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2014.04.022. Epub 2014 May 4.
Research in rodents and humans has shown divergent effects of the glucocorticoids corticosterone and cortisol (CRT) on reward processing. In rodents, administration of CRT increases reward drive by facilitating dopamine release in the ventral striatum. In humans, correspondingly, risky decision-making increases when CRT levels are elevated. Human stress studies contrariwise show that elevated CRT is accompanied by a decrease in reward-related brain activity. There are however no direct insights into how CRT acts on the reward system in the human brain. Accordingly, we used pharmacological functional magnetic resonance imaging (pharmaco-fMRI) to investigate the effects of CRT on the brain's reward system. In a randomized within-subject design we administered a high dose of CRT (40 mg) and placebo to twenty healthy male volunteers on separate days, and used a monetary incentive delay task to assess the effects of the hormone on the striatum and the amygdala in anticipation of potential reward. In contrast to animal studies, we show that this high dose of CRT strongly decreases activity of the striatum in both reward and non-reward conditions. Furthermore, we observed reductions in activity in the basolateral amygdala, a key regulator of the brain's reward system. Crucially, the overall down-regulation of the brain's reward circuit was verified on the subjective level as subjects reported significantly reduced reward preference after CRT. In sum, we provide here direct evidence in humans that CRT acts on brain regions involved in reward-related behavior, that is, the basolateral amygdala and the striatum. Our findings suggest that CRT in the quantity and time course presently used globally down-regulates the reward system, and thereby decreases motivational processing in general.
对啮齿动物和人类的研究表明,糖皮质激素皮质酮和皮质醇(CRT)对奖赏加工有不同的影响。在啮齿动物中,给予CRT可通过促进腹侧纹状体中多巴胺的释放来增加奖赏驱动力。相应地,在人类中,当CRT水平升高时,冒险决策会增加。相反,人类应激研究表明,CRT升高伴随着与奖赏相关的大脑活动减少。然而,目前尚无关于CRT如何作用于人类大脑奖赏系统的直接见解。因此,我们使用药物功能磁共振成像(药物fMRI)来研究CRT对大脑奖赏系统的影响。在一项随机的受试者内设计中,我们在不同日期给20名健康男性志愿者分别服用高剂量的CRT(40毫克)和安慰剂,并使用金钱激励延迟任务来评估该激素在预期潜在奖赏时对纹状体和杏仁核的影响。与动物研究不同,我们发现这种高剂量的CRT在奖赏和非奖赏条件下均强烈降低纹状体的活动。此外,我们观察到基底外侧杏仁核(大脑奖赏系统的关键调节者)的活动减少。至关重要的是,在主观层面上证实了大脑奖赏回路的整体下调,因为受试者报告在服用CRT后奖赏偏好显著降低。总之,我们在此提供了人类的直接证据,表明CRT作用于与奖赏相关行为有关的脑区,即基底外侧杏仁核和纹状体。我们的研究结果表明,目前全球范围内使用的CRT的数量和时间进程会下调奖赏系统,从而总体上降低动机加工。