Stress effects on circuitry regulating nigrostriatal dopamine during goal-directed action

NIH RePORTER · NIH · K99 · $91,505 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary / Abstract Chronic uncontrollable stress can precipitate or exacerbate many highly prevalent and debilitating neuropsychiatric disorders such as major depression and schizophrenia. Such stress-related disorders often share common motivational symptoms that result in reduced engagement in activities in pursuit of once- desired outcomes. Dopamine plays critical roles in voluntary movement, motivation, and reward-based learning, but its precise contribution to self-initiated goal-directed behavior remains poorly understood. The dorsomedial striatum (DMS) is well established in supporting goal-directed behavior and receives prominent dopaminergic input from the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). Anatomical inputs to these nigrostriatal dopamine neurons have been identified, but little is known about how this circuitry regulates nigrostriatal dopamine dynamics during goal-directed action. Furthermore, chronic stress manipulations in rodent models have revealed complex effects of stress on the adjacent mesolimbic dopamine projections to the ventral striatum, as well as structural and physiological alterations of corticostriatal inputs to the DMS. However, the effects of stress on nigrostriatal dopamine and the circuitry regulating it during goal-directed behavior has not been well characterized. The proposed experiments therefore will address these critical gaps by examining nigrostriatal dopamine transmission (Aim 1) and the striatonigral circuitry regulating these dopamine dynamics (Aim 2) in mice performing goal-directed behavior. These K99 mentored phase experiments will entail the integration of modern optogenetic techniques with the candidate's expertise in recording dopamine using fast-scan cyclic voltammetry, and they will provide opportunities for acquiring advanced technical training with in vivo electrophysiology and cutting-edge viral circuit-manipulation techniques under the guidance of Dr. Xin Jin (mentor) and Dr. Ed Callaway (co-mentor). Training in this suite of systems neuroscience tools will permit subsequent R00 independent phase investigations of how chronic stress alters the functional circuitry regulating nigrostriatal dopamine during goal-directed actions and more complex cost-benefit decision making (Aim 3). These experiments will entail distinct stress manipulations implemented following further guidance from Dr. Byungkook Lim (consultant) and a novel decision-making task adapted from the candidate's doctoral work examining decisions involving tradeoffs between reward and effort. Collectively, the research proposed in this Pathway to Independence award will yield unprecedented insight into how chronic stress affects the circuitry regulating an under-examined dopamine pathway in goal-directed behavior and action selection; it will provide the technical training and career development to launch the candidate's independent research program; and it will reveal important additional questions for future investiga...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9908153
Project number
5K99MH119312-02
Recipient
SALK INSTITUTE FOR BIOLOGICAL STUDIES
Principal Investigator
Nick Garber Hollon
Activity code
K99
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$91,505
Award type
5
Project period
2019-04-05 → 2021-10-31