4.7 Article

Impaired reward prediction error encoding and striatal-midbrain connectivity in depression

Journal

NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 43, Issue 7, Pages 1581-1588

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41386-018-0032-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health [R01 MH068376, K99 MH094438, R00 MH094438]
  2. John and Charlene Madison Cassidy Fellowship in Translational Neuroscience through McLean Hospital, a Livingston
  3. NARSAD
  4. Akili Interactive Labs
  5. BlackThorn Therapeutics
  6. Boehringer Ingelheim
  7. Pfizer
  8. Posit Science

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Anhedonia (hyposensitivity to rewards) and negative bias (hypersensitivity to punishments) are core features of major depressive disorder (MDD), which could stem from abnormal reinforcement learning. Emerging evidence highlights blunted reward learning and reward prediction error (RPE) signaling in the striatum in MDD, although inconsistencies exist. Preclinical studies have clarified that ventral tegmental area (VTA) neurons encode RPE and habenular neurons encode punishment prediction error (PPE), which are then transmitted to the striatum and cortex to guide goal-directed behavior. However, few studies have probed striatal activation, and functional connectivity between VTA-striatum and VTA-habenula during reward and punishment learning respectively, in unmedicated MDD. To fill this gap, we acquired fMRI data from 25 unmedicated MDD and 26 healthy individuals during a monetary instrumental learning task and utilized a computational modeling approach to characterize underlying neural correlates of RPE and PPE. Relative to controls, MDD individuals showed impaired reward learning, blunted RPE signal in the striatum and overall reduced VTA-striatal connectivity to feedback. Critically, striatal RPE signal was increasingly blunted with more major depressive episodes (MDEs). No group differences emerged in PPE signals in the habenula and VTA or in connectivity between these regions. However, PPE signals in the habenula correlated positively with number of MDEs. These results highlight impaired reward learning, disrupted RPE signaling in the striatum (particularly among individuals with more lifetime MDEs) as well as reduced VTA-striatal connectivity in MDD. Collectively, these findings highlight reward-related learning deficits in MDD and their underlying pathophysiology.

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