Department of Psychology, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1007 West Harrison Street, Chicago, IL 60607, United States.
Department of Psychology, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1007 West Harrison Street, Chicago, IL 60607, United States.
Physiol Behav. 2023 May 1;263:114110. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2023.114110. Epub 2023 Feb 3.
States of physiological need motivate individuals to seek and consume stimuli that restore homeostatic balance. This goal-directed behavior is driven, in part, by pathways that process reward and are sensitive to changes in physiological state, including the mesolimbic dopamine system. The effects of hunger and its physiological markers have been more widely studied for their role in modulating reward signaling pathways. However, fluid need produces robust goal-directed behavior and has also been shown to affect neural substrates of reward processing. To test how acute and chronic states of thirst might alter reward sensitivity, we used the intracranial self-stimulation (ICSS) rate-frequency paradigm (Carlezon & Chartoff, 2007) with male and female Long Evans rats. We hypothesized that sensitivity to ICSS would increase under an acute need state for water and would decrease under chronic deprivation. We found that acute water deprivation for 22-hours prior to the ICSS session did not alter any parameters of reward sensitivity. To elicit motivated behavior toward water in the absence of physiological need, we chemogenetically activated glutamatergic neurons of the subfornical organ (SFO). Despite eliciting more water consumption than acute deprivation, acute chemogenetic activation of SFO neurons also did not alter reward sensitivity. Finally, subjects underwent a five-day chronic water restriction protocol with daily ICSS sessions to determine the effects of sustained physiological need. Chronic water restriction resulted in reduced sensitivity to ICSS. Together, these results indicate that persistent changes in physiological state alter the responsiveness of reward circuitry that could potentially exacerbate maladaptive reward-seeking behaviors.
生理需求促使个体寻求和消费能恢复体内平衡的刺激物。这种目标导向的行为部分是由处理奖励的途径驱动的,这些途径对生理状态的变化敏感,包括中脑边缘多巴胺系统。饥饿及其生理标志物的影响因其在调节奖励信号通路方面的作用而得到更广泛的研究。然而,液体需求产生了强大的目标导向行为,并且已经表明它会影响奖励处理的神经基质。为了测试急性和慢性口渴状态如何改变奖励敏感性,我们使用雄性和雌性长爪沙鼠的颅内自我刺激 (ICSS) 率-频率范式 (Carlezon & Chartoff, 2007)。我们假设在急性水需求状态下,ICSS 的敏感性会增加,而在慢性剥夺状态下会降低。我们发现,在 ICSS 会议前进行 22 小时的急性水剥夺不会改变奖励敏感性的任何参数。为了在没有生理需求的情况下激发对水的动机行为,我们化学激活了穹窿下器官 (SFO) 的谷氨酸能神经元。尽管化学激活 SFO 神经元会引起比急性剥夺更多的水消耗,但也不会改变奖励敏感性。最后,受试者接受了为期五天的慢性水限制协议,每天进行 ICSS 会议,以确定持续生理需求的影响。慢性水限制导致对 ICSS 的敏感性降低。总的来说,这些结果表明,生理状态的持续变化改变了奖励回路的反应性,这可能会加剧适应不良的奖励寻求行为。