Cargando…

Bupropion Increases Selection of High Effort Activity in Rats Tested on a Progressive Ratio/Chow Feeding Choice Procedure: Implications for Treatment of Effort-Related Motivational Symptoms

BACKGROUND: Depression and related disorders are characterized by deficits in behavioral activation, exertion of effort, and other psychomotor/motivational dysfunctions. Depressed patients show alterations in effort-related decision making and a bias towards selection of low effort activities. It ha...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Randall, Patrick A., Lee, Christie A., Podurgiel, Samantha J., Hart, Evan, Yohn, Samantha E., Jones, Myles, Rowland, Margaret, López-Cruz, Laura, Correa, Mercè, Salamone, John D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4368885/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25575584
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ijnp/pyu017
_version_ 1782362708296859648
author Randall, Patrick A.
Lee, Christie A.
Podurgiel, Samantha J.
Hart, Evan
Yohn, Samantha E.
Jones, Myles
Rowland, Margaret
López-Cruz, Laura
Correa, Mercè
Salamone, John D.
author_facet Randall, Patrick A.
Lee, Christie A.
Podurgiel, Samantha J.
Hart, Evan
Yohn, Samantha E.
Jones, Myles
Rowland, Margaret
López-Cruz, Laura
Correa, Mercè
Salamone, John D.
author_sort Randall, Patrick A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Depression and related disorders are characterized by deficits in behavioral activation, exertion of effort, and other psychomotor/motivational dysfunctions. Depressed patients show alterations in effort-related decision making and a bias towards selection of low effort activities. It has been suggested that animal tests of effort-related decision making could be useful as models of motivational dysfunctions seen in psychopathology. METHODS: Because clinical studies have suggested that inhibition of catecholamine uptake may be a useful strategy for treatment of effort-related motivational symptoms, the present research assessed the ability of bupropion to increase work output in rats responding on a test of effort-related decision-making (ie, a progressive ratio/chow feeding choice task). With this task, rats can choose between working for a preferred food (high-carbohydrate pellets) by lever pressing on a progressive ratio schedule vs obtaining a less preferred laboratory chow that is freely available in the chamber. RESULTS: Bupropion (10.0–40.0 mg/kg intraperitoneal) significantly increased all measures of progressive ratio lever pressing, but decreased chow intake. These effects were greatest in animals with low baseline levels of work output on the progressive ratio schedule. Because accumbens dopamine is implicated in effort-related processes, the effects of bupropion on markers of accumbens dopamine transmission were examined. Bupropion elevated extracellular dopamine levels in accumbens core as measured by microdialysis and increased phosphorylated dopamine and cyclic-AMP related phosphoprotein 32 kDaltons (pDARPP-32) immunoreactivity in a manner consistent with D1 and D2 receptor stimulation. CONCLUSION: The ability of bupropion to increase exertion of effort in instrumental behavior may have implications for the pathophysiology and treatment of effort-related motivational symptoms in humans.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4368885
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-43688852015-09-01 Bupropion Increases Selection of High Effort Activity in Rats Tested on a Progressive Ratio/Chow Feeding Choice Procedure: Implications for Treatment of Effort-Related Motivational Symptoms Randall, Patrick A. Lee, Christie A. Podurgiel, Samantha J. Hart, Evan Yohn, Samantha E. Jones, Myles Rowland, Margaret López-Cruz, Laura Correa, Mercè Salamone, John D. Int J Neuropsychopharmacol Research Article BACKGROUND: Depression and related disorders are characterized by deficits in behavioral activation, exertion of effort, and other psychomotor/motivational dysfunctions. Depressed patients show alterations in effort-related decision making and a bias towards selection of low effort activities. It has been suggested that animal tests of effort-related decision making could be useful as models of motivational dysfunctions seen in psychopathology. METHODS: Because clinical studies have suggested that inhibition of catecholamine uptake may be a useful strategy for treatment of effort-related motivational symptoms, the present research assessed the ability of bupropion to increase work output in rats responding on a test of effort-related decision-making (ie, a progressive ratio/chow feeding choice task). With this task, rats can choose between working for a preferred food (high-carbohydrate pellets) by lever pressing on a progressive ratio schedule vs obtaining a less preferred laboratory chow that is freely available in the chamber. RESULTS: Bupropion (10.0–40.0 mg/kg intraperitoneal) significantly increased all measures of progressive ratio lever pressing, but decreased chow intake. These effects were greatest in animals with low baseline levels of work output on the progressive ratio schedule. Because accumbens dopamine is implicated in effort-related processes, the effects of bupropion on markers of accumbens dopamine transmission were examined. Bupropion elevated extracellular dopamine levels in accumbens core as measured by microdialysis and increased phosphorylated dopamine and cyclic-AMP related phosphoprotein 32 kDaltons (pDARPP-32) immunoreactivity in a manner consistent with D1 and D2 receptor stimulation. CONCLUSION: The ability of bupropion to increase exertion of effort in instrumental behavior may have implications for the pathophysiology and treatment of effort-related motivational symptoms in humans. Oxford University Press 2015-01-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4368885/ /pubmed/25575584 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ijnp/pyu017 Text en © The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of CINP. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Research Article
Randall, Patrick A.
Lee, Christie A.
Podurgiel, Samantha J.
Hart, Evan
Yohn, Samantha E.
Jones, Myles
Rowland, Margaret
López-Cruz, Laura
Correa, Mercè
Salamone, John D.
Bupropion Increases Selection of High Effort Activity in Rats Tested on a Progressive Ratio/Chow Feeding Choice Procedure: Implications for Treatment of Effort-Related Motivational Symptoms
title Bupropion Increases Selection of High Effort Activity in Rats Tested on a Progressive Ratio/Chow Feeding Choice Procedure: Implications for Treatment of Effort-Related Motivational Symptoms
title_full Bupropion Increases Selection of High Effort Activity in Rats Tested on a Progressive Ratio/Chow Feeding Choice Procedure: Implications for Treatment of Effort-Related Motivational Symptoms
title_fullStr Bupropion Increases Selection of High Effort Activity in Rats Tested on a Progressive Ratio/Chow Feeding Choice Procedure: Implications for Treatment of Effort-Related Motivational Symptoms
title_full_unstemmed Bupropion Increases Selection of High Effort Activity in Rats Tested on a Progressive Ratio/Chow Feeding Choice Procedure: Implications for Treatment of Effort-Related Motivational Symptoms
title_short Bupropion Increases Selection of High Effort Activity in Rats Tested on a Progressive Ratio/Chow Feeding Choice Procedure: Implications for Treatment of Effort-Related Motivational Symptoms
title_sort bupropion increases selection of high effort activity in rats tested on a progressive ratio/chow feeding choice procedure: implications for treatment of effort-related motivational symptoms
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4368885/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25575584
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ijnp/pyu017
work_keys_str_mv AT randallpatricka bupropionincreasesselectionofhigheffortactivityinratstestedonaprogressiveratiochowfeedingchoiceprocedureimplicationsfortreatmentofeffortrelatedmotivationalsymptoms
AT leechristiea bupropionincreasesselectionofhigheffortactivityinratstestedonaprogressiveratiochowfeedingchoiceprocedureimplicationsfortreatmentofeffortrelatedmotivationalsymptoms
AT podurgielsamanthaj bupropionincreasesselectionofhigheffortactivityinratstestedonaprogressiveratiochowfeedingchoiceprocedureimplicationsfortreatmentofeffortrelatedmotivationalsymptoms
AT hartevan bupropionincreasesselectionofhigheffortactivityinratstestedonaprogressiveratiochowfeedingchoiceprocedureimplicationsfortreatmentofeffortrelatedmotivationalsymptoms
AT yohnsamanthae bupropionincreasesselectionofhigheffortactivityinratstestedonaprogressiveratiochowfeedingchoiceprocedureimplicationsfortreatmentofeffortrelatedmotivationalsymptoms
AT jonesmyles bupropionincreasesselectionofhigheffortactivityinratstestedonaprogressiveratiochowfeedingchoiceprocedureimplicationsfortreatmentofeffortrelatedmotivationalsymptoms
AT rowlandmargaret bupropionincreasesselectionofhigheffortactivityinratstestedonaprogressiveratiochowfeedingchoiceprocedureimplicationsfortreatmentofeffortrelatedmotivationalsymptoms
AT lopezcruzlaura bupropionincreasesselectionofhigheffortactivityinratstestedonaprogressiveratiochowfeedingchoiceprocedureimplicationsfortreatmentofeffortrelatedmotivationalsymptoms
AT correamerce bupropionincreasesselectionofhigheffortactivityinratstestedonaprogressiveratiochowfeedingchoiceprocedureimplicationsfortreatmentofeffortrelatedmotivationalsymptoms
AT salamonejohnd bupropionincreasesselectionofhigheffortactivityinratstestedonaprogressiveratiochowfeedingchoiceprocedureimplicationsfortreatmentofeffortrelatedmotivationalsymptoms