4.6 Article

Positive and negative feedback learning and associated dopamine and serotonin transporter binding after methamphetamine

Journal

BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 271, Issue -, Pages 195-202

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2014.06.031

Keywords

Cingulate cortex; Orbitofrontal cortex; Caudate-putamen; Dopamine; Serotonin; Reversal learning

Funding

  1. NIH Minority Biomedical Research Support program at California State University, Los Angeles (CSULA)
  2. NIMH [SC2 MH087974]
  3. NIDA [1R01DA012204, 1R21 DA033572]

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Learning from mistakes and prospectively adjusting behavior in response to reward feedback is an important facet of performance monitoring. Dopamine (DA) pathways play an important role in feedback learning and a growing literature has also emerged on the importance of serotonin (5HT) in reward learning, particularly during punishment or reward omission (negative feedback). Cognitive impairments resulting from psychostimulant exposure may arise from altered patterns in feedback learning, which in turn may be modulated by DA and 5HT transmission. We analyzed long-term, off-drug changes in learning from positive and negative feedback and associated striatal DA transporter (DAT) and frontocortical 5HT transporter (SERT) binding in rats pretreated with methamphetamine (mAMPH). Specifically, we assessed the reversal phase of pairwise visual discrimination learning in rats receiving single dose(mAMPH(single)) vs. escalating-dose exposure (mAMPH(escal)). Using fine-grained trial-by-trial analyses, we found increased sensitivity to and reliance on positive feedback in mAMPH-pretreated animals, with the mAMPH(single) group showing more pronounced use of this type of feedback. In contrast, overall negative feedback sensitivity was not altered following any mAMPH treatment. In addition to validating the enduring effects of mAMPH on early reversal learning, we found more consecutive error commissions before the first correct response in mAMPH-pretreated rats. This behavioral rigidity was negatively correlated with subregional frontocortical SERT whereas positive feedback sensitivity negatively correlated with striatal DAT binding. These results provide new evidence for the overlapping, yet dissociable roles of DA and 5HT systems in overcoming perseveration and in learning new reward rules. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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