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Acute Stress Enhances Associative Learning via Dopamine Signaling in the Ventral Lateral Striatum. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Acute stress boosts vigilance and enhances the ability to detect important stimuli, which helps in forming associations between cues and rewards.
  • The study found that stress elevates dopamine levels specifically in the ventral lateral striatum, leading to increased conditioned responding in rats during a reward-learning task.
  • Blocking dopamine receptors in the ventral lateral striatum stops the stress-induced boost in learning, showing that this brain area plays a crucial role in how stress affects our ability to learn about rewards.

Article Abstract

Acute stress transiently increases vigilance, enhancing the detection of salient stimuli in one's environment. This increased perceptual sensitivity is thought to promote the association of rewarding outcomes with relevant cues. The mesolimbic dopamine system is critical for learning cue-reward associations. Dopamine levels in the ventral striatum are elevated following exposure to stress. Together, this suggests that the mesolimbic dopamine system could mediate the influence of acute stress on cue-reward learning. To address this possibility, we examined how a single stressful experience influenced learning in an appetitive pavlovian conditioning task. Male rats underwent an episode of restraint prior to the first conditioning session. This acute stress treatment augmented conditioned responding in subsequent sessions. Voltammetry recordings of mesolimbic dopamine levels demonstrated that acute stress selectively increased reward-evoked dopamine release in the ventral lateral striatum (VLS), but not in the ventral medial striatum. Antagonizing dopamine receptors in the VLS blocked the stress-induced enhancement of conditioned responding. Collectively, these findings illustrate that stress engages dopamine signaling in the VLS to facilitate appetitive learning. Acute stress influences learning about aversive and rewarding outcomes. Dopamine neurons are sensitive to stress and critical for reward learning. However, it is unclear whether stress regulates reward learning via dopamine signaling. Using fast-scan cyclic voltammetry as rats underwent pavlovian conditioning, we demonstrate that a single stressful experience increases reward-evoked dopamine release in the ventral lateral striatum. This enhanced dopamine signal accompanies a long-lasting increase in conditioned behavioral responding. These findings highlight that the ventral lateral striatum is a node for mediating the effect of stress on reward processing.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7252483PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3003-19.2020DOI Listing

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