Jd. Salamone et al., Nucleus accumbens dopamine depletions make animals highly sensitive to high fixed ratio requirements but do not impair primary food reinforcement, NEUROSCIENC, 105(4), 2001, pp. 863-870
It has been suggested that dopamine in nucleus accumbens is involved in the
process of enabling organisms to overcome work-related response costs. One
way of controlling work costs with operant schedules is to use fixed ratio
schedules with different ratio requirements. In the present study, the eff
ects of nucleus accumbens dopamine depletions were investigated using six s
chedules: fixed ratio 5, 20, 50, 100, 200, and 300. In the first three sche
dules the food reinforcement consisted of one 45 mg food pellet per ratio c
ompleted. In the remaining schedules the food reinforcement per ratio compl
eted was increased to two pellets for fixed ratio 100, four pellets for fix
ed ratio 200, and six pellets for fixed ratio 300. All rats were trained ex
tensively prior to surgery, and rats were able to maintain high levels of r
esponding on all schedules up to the fixed ratio 300. After training, rats
were injected with either ascorbate vehicle or 6-hydroxydopamine into the n
ucleus accumbens. Rats were tested post-surgically on each of the schedules
, with 3 days of testing per schedule,
Rats with nucleus accumbens dopamine depletions exhibited behavioral defici
ts that were highly dependent upon the ratio value. There were small and tr
ansient effects of dopamine depletion on fixed ratio 5 lever pressing, but
as the ratio value got larger the impairment became greater. On the fixed r
atio 20 and 50 schedules, response rates were partially reduced in dopamine
-depleted rats. Responding on the fixed ratio 200 and 300 schedules was sev
erely impaired, and on the last day of fixed ratio 300 testing no dopamine-
depleted rats obtained a single reinforcer. These data are consistent with
previous reports that accumbens dopamine depletions enhance 'ratio strain',
making rats more sensitive to high ratio values. The induction of ratio st
rain by dopamine depletions does not appear to be related to a loss of appe
tite, and seems to be relatively independent of the baseline rate of respon
ding and the overall density of food reinforcement across the session.
We conclude that dopamine in nucleus accumbens may be important for enablin
g rats to overcome behavioral constraints such as work-related response cos
ts, and may be critical for the behavioral organization and conditioning pr
ocesses that enable animals to emit large numbers of responses in the absen
ce of primary reinforcement. (C) 2001 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Science L
td. All rights reserved.