Literature DB >> 28694335

Prior Cocaine Self-Administration Increases Response-Outcome Encoding That Is Divorced from Actions Selected in Dorsal Lateral Striatum.

Amanda C Burton1,2, Gregory B Bissonette1, Adam C Zhao1, Pooja K Patel1, Matthew R Roesch3,2.   

Abstract

Dorsal lateral striatum (DLS) is a highly associative structure that encodes relationships among environmental stimuli, behavioral responses, and predicted outcomes. DLS is known to be disrupted after chronic drug abuse; however, it remains unclear what neural signals in DLS are altered. Current theory suggests that drug use enhances stimulus-response processing at the expense of response-outcome encoding, but this has mostly been tested in simple behavioral tasks. Here, we investigated what neural correlates in DLS are affected by previous cocaine exposure as rats performed a complex reward-guided decision-making task in which predicted reward value was independently manipulated by changing the delay to or size of reward associated with a response direction across a series of trial blocks. After cocaine self-administration, rats exhibited stronger biases toward higher-value reward and firing in DLS more strongly represented action-outcome contingencies independent from actions subsequently taken rather than outcomes predicted by selected actions (chosen-outcome contingencies) and associations between stimuli and actions (stimulus-response contingencies). These results suggest that cocaine self-administration strengthens action-outcome encoding in rats (as opposed to chosen-outcome or stimulus-response encoding), which abnormally biases behavior toward valued reward when there is a choice between two options during reward-guided decision-making.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Current theories suggest that the impaired decision-making observed in individuals who chronically abuse drugs reflects a decrease in goal-directed behaviors and an increase in habitual behaviors governed by neural representations of response-outcome (R-O) and stimulus-response associations, respectively. We examined the impact that prior cocaine self-administration had on firing in dorsal lateral striatum (DLS), a brain area known to be involved in habit formation and affected by drugs of abuse, during performance of a complex reward-guided decision-making task. Surprisingly, we found that previous cocaine exposure enhanced R-O associations in DLS. This suggests that there may be more complex consequences of drug abuse than current theories have explored, especially when examining brain and behavior in the context of a complex two-choice decision-making task.
Copyright © 2017 the authors 0270-6474/17/377737-11$15.00/0.

Entities:  

Keywords:  action–value; cocaine; decision; dorsal striatum; rat; single neuron

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28694335      PMCID: PMC5551065          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0897-17.2017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


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