Homeostatic Reinforcement Theory Accounts for Sodium Appetitive State- and Taste-Dependent Dopamine Responding

Author:

Duriez Alexia12ORCID,Bergerot Clémence1345,Cone Jackson J.6ORCID,Roitman Mitchell F.7,Gutkin Boris1

Affiliation:

1. Group for Neural Theory, LNC2 DEC ENS, PSL University, 75005 Paris, France

2. School of Life Sciences, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland

3. Charité—Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Einstein Center for Neurosciences Berlin, 10117 Berlin, Germany

4. Institute for Theoretical Biology, Department of Biology, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Philippstraße 13, 10115 Berlin, Germany

5. Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience Berlin, Philippstr. 13, 10115 Berlin, Germany

6. Hotchkiss Brain Institute, Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada

7. Department of Psychology, University of Illinois Chicago, Chicago, IL 60607, USA

Abstract

Seeking and consuming nutrients is essential to survival and the maintenance of life. Dynamic and volatile environments require that animals learn complex behavioral strategies to obtain the necessary nutritive substances. While this has been classically viewed in terms of homeostatic regulation, recent theoretical work proposed that such strategies result from reinforcement learning processes. This theory proposed that phasic dopamine (DA) signals play a key role in signaling potentially need-fulfilling outcomes. To examine links between homeostatic and reinforcement learning processes, we focus on sodium appetite as sodium depletion triggers state- and taste-dependent changes in behavior and DA signaling evoked by sodium-related stimuli. We find that both the behavior and the dynamics of DA signaling underlying sodium appetite can be accounted for by a homeostatically regulated reinforcement learning framework (HRRL). We first optimized HRRL-based agents to sodium-seeking behavior measured in rodents. Agents successfully reproduced the state and the taste dependence of behavioral responding for sodium as well as for lithium and potassium salts. We then showed that these same agents account for the regulation of DA signals evoked by sodium tastants in a taste- and state-dependent manner. Our models quantitatively describe how DA signals evoked by sodium decrease with satiety and increase with deprivation. Lastly, our HRRL agents assigned equal preference for sodium versus the lithium containing salts, accounting for similar behavioral and neurophysiological observations in rodents. We propose that animals use orosensory signals as predictors of the internal impact of the consumed good and our results pose clear targets for future experiments. In sum, this work suggests that appetite-driven behavior may be driven by reinforcement learning mechanisms that are dynamically tuned by homeostatic need.

Funder

NIH

ANR

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

Reference62 articles.

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