Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge, CB2 3EB, UK.
Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience Institute, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge, CB2 3EB, UK.
Neuropsychopharmacology. 2019 Feb;44(3):564-571. doi: 10.1038/s41386-018-0272-9. Epub 2018 Nov 15.
Behavioral flexibility, which allows organisms to adapt their actions in response to environmental changes, is impaired in a number of neuropsychiatric conditions, including obsessive-compulsive disorder and addiction. Studies in human subjects and monkeys have reported correlations between individual differences in dopamine D2-type receptor (D2R) levels in the caudate nucleus and performance in a discrimination reversal task, in which established contingent relationships between abstract stimuli and rewards (or punishments) are reversed. Global genetic deletion of the D2R in mice disrupts reversal performance, indicating a likely causal role for this receptor in supporting flexible behaviors. To directly examine the specific role of caudate D2-type receptors in reversal performance, the D2/3/4R agonist quinpirole was infused via chronic indwelling cannulae into the medial caudate of male and female marmoset monkeys performing a touchscreen-based serial discrimination reversal task. Given prior evidence for dose-dependent effects of quinpirole and other dopaminergic drugs, a full dose-response curve was established. Individually, marmosets displayed marked differences in behavioral sensitivity to specific doses of intra-caudate quinpirole. Collectively, they exhibited a behaviorally specific bi-phasic deficit in reversal learning, being consistently impaired at both relatively low and high doses of quinpirole. However, intermediate doses of intra-caudate quinpirole produced significant improvement in reversal performance. These data support previous human and monkey neuroimaging studies by providing causal evidence of a U-shaped function describing how dopamine modulates cognitive flexibility in the primate striatum.
行为灵活性使生物体能够根据环境变化调整其行为,在许多神经精神疾病中受到损害,包括强迫症和成瘾。人类和猴子的研究报告了尾状核中多巴胺 D2 型受体 (D2R) 水平的个体差异与区分反转任务中的表现之间的相关性,在该任务中,抽象刺激与奖励(或惩罚)之间的既定关联被反转。D2R 在小鼠中的全局基因缺失破坏了反转性能,表明该受体在支持灵活行为中可能具有因果作用。为了直接检查尾状核 D2 型受体在反转性能中的特定作用,通过慢性留置套管将 D2/3/4R 激动剂喹吡罗注入正在执行基于触摸屏的序列区分反转任务的雄性和雌性狨猴的内侧尾状核。鉴于先前有证据表明喹吡罗和其他多巴胺能药物存在剂量依赖性作用,因此建立了完整的剂量反应曲线。个体上,狨猴在对特定剂量的尾状核内喹吡罗的行为敏感性方面表现出明显差异。总体而言,它们在反转学习中表现出行为特异性的双相缺陷,在喹吡罗的相对低剂量和高剂量下均持续受损。然而,尾状核内喹吡罗的中等剂量会显著改善反转性能。这些数据通过提供描述多巴胺如何在灵长类动物纹状体中调节认知灵活性的 U 形功能的因果证据,支持了先前的人类和猴子神经影像学研究。