Covey Dan P, Dantrassy Hannah M, Zlebnik Natalie E, Gildish Iness, Cheer Joseph F
Departments of Anatomy and Neurobiology, and.
Departments of Anatomy and Neurobiology, and Psychiatry, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21201
J Neurosci. 2016 May 4;36(18):4993-5002. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0135-16.2016.
Huntington's disease (HD) is a heritable neurodegenerative disorder caused by expansion of CAG (glutamine) repeats in the HTT gene. A prodromal stage characterized by psychiatric disturbances normally precedes primary motor symptoms and suppressed motivation represents one of the earliest and most common psychiatric symptoms. Although dopamine in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) critically regulates motivation and altered dopamine signaling is implicated in HD, the nature of dopaminergic deficits and contribution to symptoms in HD is poorly understood. We therefore tested whether altered NAc dopamine release accompanies motivational deficits in the Q175 knock-in HD mouse model. Q175 mice express a CAG expansion of the human mutant huntingtin allele in the native mouse genome and gradually manifest symptoms late in life, closely mimicking the genotypic context and disease progression in human HD. Sub-second extracellular dopamine release dynamics were monitored using fast-scan cyclic voltammetry, whereas motivation was assessed using a progressive ratio reinforcement schedule. As the response ratio (lever presses per reward) escalated, Q175 mice exerted less effort to earn fewer rewards versus wild-type (WT). Moreover, dopamine released at reward delivery dynamically encoded increasing reward cost in WT but not Q175 mice. Deficits were specific to situations of high effortful demand as no difference was observed in locomotion, free feeding, hedonic processing, or reward seeking when the response requirement was low. This compromised dopaminergic encoding of reward delivery coincident with suppressed motivation to work for reward in Q175 mice provides novel, neurobiological insight into an established and clinically relevant endophenotype of prodromal HD.
Psychiatric impairments in Huntington's disease (HD) typically manifest early in disease progression, before motor deficits. However, the neurobiological factors contributing to psychiatric symptoms are poorly understood. We used a mouse HD model and assessed whether impaired dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), a brain region critical to goal-directed behaviors, accompanies motivational deficits, one of the most common early HD symptoms. HD mice exhibited blunted motivation to work for food reward coincident with diminished dopamine release to reward receipt. Motivational and NAc dopaminergic deficits were not associated with gross motor deficits or impaired food seeking when effortful demands were low. This work identifies a specific prodromal HD phenotype associated with a prominent and previously unidentified neurobiological impairment.
亨廷顿舞蹈症(HD)是一种遗传性神经退行性疾病,由HTT基因中CAG(谷氨酰胺)重复序列的扩增引起。通常以精神障碍为特征的前驱期先于主要运动症状出现,而动机抑制是最早和最常见的精神症状之一。尽管伏隔核(NAc)中的多巴胺对动机起着关键调节作用,且多巴胺信号改变与HD有关,但HD中多巴胺能缺陷的本质及其对症状的影响仍知之甚少。因此,我们测试了在Q175基因敲入HD小鼠模型中,NAc多巴胺释放改变是否与动机缺陷相关。Q175小鼠在天然小鼠基因组中表达人类突变亨廷顿蛋白等位基因的CAG扩增,在生命后期逐渐出现症状,紧密模拟人类HD的基因型背景和疾病进展。使用快速扫描循环伏安法监测亚秒级细胞外多巴胺释放动态,而使用渐进比率强化程序评估动机。随着反应比率(每次奖励的杠杆按压次数)升高,与野生型(WT)相比,Q175小鼠为获得更少奖励付出的努力更少。此外,在WT小鼠中,奖励发放时释放的多巴胺动态编码了不断增加的奖励成本,但在Q175小鼠中并非如此。缺陷特定于高努力需求的情况,因为当反应要求较低时,在运动、自由进食、享乐加工或奖励寻求方面未观察到差异。Q175小鼠中这种受损的奖励发放多巴胺能编码与为奖励而工作的动机抑制同时出现,为前驱期HD已确立的、临床相关的内表型提供了新的神经生物学见解。
亨廷顿舞蹈症(HD)中的精神障碍通常在疾病进展早期出现,早于运动缺陷。然而,导致精神症状的神经生物学因素尚不清楚。我们使用小鼠HD模型,评估了伏隔核(NAc)中多巴胺释放受损(NAc是对目标导向行为至关重要的脑区)是否与动机缺陷相关,动机缺陷是HD最常见的早期症状之一。HD小鼠表现出为食物奖励而工作的动机减弱,同时对奖励接收的多巴胺释放减少。当努力需求较低时,动机和NAc多巴胺能缺陷与总体运动缺陷或觅食受损无关。这项工作确定了一种特定的前驱期HD表型,与一种突出且先前未被识别的神经生物学损伤相关。