| Literature DB >> 27001827 |
Tianye Jia1, Christine Macare1, Sylvane Desrivières1, Dante A Gonzalez2, Chenyang Tao3, Xiaoxi Ji3, Barbara Ruggeri1, Frauke Nees4, Tobias Banaschewski5, Gareth J Barker6, Arun L W Bokde7, Uli Bromberg8, Christian Büchel8, Patricia J Conrod9, Rachel Dove2, Vincent Frouin10, Jürgen Gallinat11, Hugh Garavan12, Penny A Gowland13, Andreas Heinz11, Bernd Ittermann14, Mark Lathrop15, Hervé Lemaitre16, Jean-Luc Martinot16, Tomáš Paus17, Zdenka Pausova18, Jean-Baptiste Poline19, Marcella Rietschel20, Trevor Robbins21, Michael N Smolka22, Christian P Müller23, Jianfeng Feng24, Adrian Rothenfluh2, Herta Flor4, Gunter Schumann25.
Abstract
Dysfunctional reward processing is implicated in various mental disorders, including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and addictions. Such impairments might involve different components of the reward process, including brain activity during reward anticipation. We examined brain nodes engaged by reward anticipation in 1,544 adolescents and identified a network containing a core striatal node and cortical nodes facilitating outcome prediction and response preparation. Distinct nodes and functional connections were preferentially associated with either adolescent hyperactivity or alcohol consumption, thus conveying specificity of reward processing to clinically relevant behavior. We observed associations between the striatal node, hyperactivity, and the vacuolar protein sorting-associated protein 4A (VPS4A) gene in humans, and the causal role of Vps4 for hyperactivity was validated in Drosophila Our data provide a neurobehavioral model explaining the heterogeneity of reward-related behaviors and generate a hypothesis accounting for their enduring nature.Entities:
Keywords: GWAS; VPS4A; dopamine receptor; fMRI; neural network
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27001827 PMCID: PMC4833244 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1503252113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779