4.5 Article

Risk-assessment and risk-taking behavior predict potassium- and amphetamine-induced dopamine response in the dorsal striatum of rats

Journal

FRONTIERS IN BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00236

Keywords

addiction; behavioral profiles; chronoamperometry; multivariate concentric square field (TM) (MCSF); Multivariate data analysis; neurochemistry; open field; partial least squares projections to latent structures (PLS)

Funding

  1. Alcohol Research Council of the Swedish Alcohol Retailing Monopoly
  2. European Foundation for Alcohol Research [EA 11 30]
  3. Swedish Research Council [K2012-61X-22090-01-3]
  4. Facias Foundation
  5. Magnus Bergvall Foundation
  6. Ake Wiberg Foundation
  7. Fredrik and Ingrid Thuring Foundation

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Certain personality types and behavioral traits display high correlations to drug use and an increased level of dopamine in the reward system is a common denominator of all drugs of abuse. Dopamine response to drugs has been suggested to correlate with some of these personality types and to be a key factor influencing the predisposition to addiction. This study investigated if behavioral traits can be related to potassium-and amphetamine-induced dopamine response in the dorsal striatum, an area hypothesized to be involved in the shift from drug use to addiction. The open field and multivariate concentric square field (TM) tests were used to assess individual behavior in male Wistar rats. Chronoamperometric recordings were then made to study the potassium-and amphetamine-induced dopamine response in vivo. A classification based on risk-taking behavior in the open field was used for further comparisons. Risk-taking behavior was correlated between the behavioral tests and high risk takers displayed a more pronounced response to the dopamine uptake blocking effects of amphetamine. Behavioral parameters from both tests could also predict potassium-and amphetamine-induced dopamine responses showing a correlation between neurochemistry and behavior in risk-assessment and risk-taking parameters. In conclusion, the high risk-taking rats showed a more pronounced reduction of dopamine uptake in the dorsal striatum after amphetamine indicating that this area may contribute to the sensitivity of these animals to psychostimulants and proneness to addiction. Further, inherent dopamine activity was related to risk-assessment behavior, which may be of importance for decision-making and inhibitory control, key components in addiction.

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