Dopamine activity in the nigrostriatal pathway alters cue‐induced risky choice patterns in female rats

Author:

Hathaway Brett A.1ORCID,Li Andrew1,Brodie Hannah G.1,Silveira Mason M.1,Tremblay Melanie1,Seo Yeon Soo1,Winstanley Catharine A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health University of British Columbia Vancouver Canada

Abstract

AbstractDeficits in cost/benefit decision making is a critical risk factor for gambling disorder. Reward‐paired cues may play an important role, as these stimuli can enhance risk preference in rats. Despite extensive research implicating the dorsal striatum in the compulsive aspects of addiction, the role of nigrostriatal dopaminergic activity in cue‐induced risk preference remains unclear, particularly in females. Accordingly, we examined the effects of manipulating the dopaminergic nigrostriatal pathway on cue‐induced risky choice in female rats. TH:Cre rats were trained on the cued version of the rat Gambling Task. This task was designed such that maximal reward is attained by avoiding the high‐risk, high‐reward options and instead favouring the options associated with lower per‐trial gains, as they feature less frequent and shorter time‐out penalties. Adding reward‐paired audiovisual cues to the task leads to greater risky choice on average. To assess the role of the nigrostriatal pathway, a viral vector carrying either Cre‐dependent inhibitory or excitatory DREADD was infused into the substantia nigra. Rats then received clozapine‐N‐oxide either during task acquisition or after a stable performance baseline was reached. Inhibition of this pathway accelerated the development of risk preference in early sessions and increased risky choice during performance, but long‐term inhibition actually improved decision making. Activation of this pathway had minimal effects. These results provide evidence for the involvement of the dopaminergic nigrostriatal pathway in cue‐induced risk preference in females, therefore shedding light on its role in cost/benefit decision‐making deficits and expanding our knowledge of the female dopaminergic system.

Publisher

Wiley

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