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Increased Reward-Related Activation in the Ventral Striatum During Stress Exposure Associated With Positive Affect in the Daily Life of Young Adults With a Family History of Depression. Preliminary Findings

Background: Being the offspring of a parent with major depression disorder (MDD) is a strong predictor for developing MDD. Blunted striatal responses to reward were identified in individuals with MDD and in asymptomatic individuals with family history of depression (FHD). Stress is a major etiologic...

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Autores principales: Martin-Soelch, Chantal, Guillod, Matthias, Gaillard, Claudie, Recabarren, Romina Evelyn, Federspiel, Andrea, Mueller-Pfeiffer, Christoph, Homan, Philipp, Hasler, Gregor, Schoebi, Dominik, Horsch, Antje, Gomez, Patrick
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7873952/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33584359
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.563475
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author Martin-Soelch, Chantal
Guillod, Matthias
Gaillard, Claudie
Recabarren, Romina Evelyn
Federspiel, Andrea
Mueller-Pfeiffer, Christoph
Homan, Philipp
Hasler, Gregor
Schoebi, Dominik
Horsch, Antje
Gomez, Patrick
author_facet Martin-Soelch, Chantal
Guillod, Matthias
Gaillard, Claudie
Recabarren, Romina Evelyn
Federspiel, Andrea
Mueller-Pfeiffer, Christoph
Homan, Philipp
Hasler, Gregor
Schoebi, Dominik
Horsch, Antje
Gomez, Patrick
author_sort Martin-Soelch, Chantal
collection PubMed
description Background: Being the offspring of a parent with major depression disorder (MDD) is a strong predictor for developing MDD. Blunted striatal responses to reward were identified in individuals with MDD and in asymptomatic individuals with family history of depression (FHD). Stress is a major etiological factor for MDD and was also reported to reduce the striatal responses to reward. The stress-reward interactions in FHD individuals has not been explored yet. Extending neuroimaging results into daily-life experience, self-reported ambulatory measures of positive affect (PA) were shown to be associated with striatal activation during reward processing. A reduction of self-reported PA in daily life is consistently reported in individuals with current MDD. Here, we aimed to test (1) whether increased family risk of depression is associated with blunted neural and self-reported reward responses. (2) the stress-reward interactions at the neural level. We expected a stronger reduction of reward-related striatal activation under stress in FHD individuals compared to HC. (3) the associations between fMRI and daily life self-reported data on reward and stress experiences, with a specific interest in the striatum as a crucial region for reward processing. Method: Participants were 16 asymptomatic young adults with FHD and 16 controls (HC). They performed the Fribourg Reward Task with and without stress induction, using event-related fMRI. We conducted whole-brain analyses comparing the two groups for the main effect of reward (rewarded > not-rewarded) during reward feedback in control (no-stress) and stress conditions. Beta weights extracted from significant activation in this contrast were correlated with self-reported PA and negative affect (NA) assessed over 1 week. Results: Under stress induction, the reward-related activation in the ventral striatum (VS) was higher in the FHD group than in the HC group. Unexpectedly, we did not find significant group differences in the self-reported daily life PA measures. During stress induction, VS reward-related activation correlated positively with PA in both groups and negatively with NA in the HC group. Conclusion: As expected, our results indicate that increased family risk of depression was associated with specific striatum reactivity to reward in a stress condition, and support previous findings that ventral striatal reward-related response is associated with PA. A new unexpected finding is the negative association between NA and reward-related ventral striatal activation in the HC group.
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spelling pubmed-78739522021-02-11 Increased Reward-Related Activation in the Ventral Striatum During Stress Exposure Associated With Positive Affect in the Daily Life of Young Adults With a Family History of Depression. Preliminary Findings Martin-Soelch, Chantal Guillod, Matthias Gaillard, Claudie Recabarren, Romina Evelyn Federspiel, Andrea Mueller-Pfeiffer, Christoph Homan, Philipp Hasler, Gregor Schoebi, Dominik Horsch, Antje Gomez, Patrick Front Psychiatry Psychiatry Background: Being the offspring of a parent with major depression disorder (MDD) is a strong predictor for developing MDD. Blunted striatal responses to reward were identified in individuals with MDD and in asymptomatic individuals with family history of depression (FHD). Stress is a major etiological factor for MDD and was also reported to reduce the striatal responses to reward. The stress-reward interactions in FHD individuals has not been explored yet. Extending neuroimaging results into daily-life experience, self-reported ambulatory measures of positive affect (PA) were shown to be associated with striatal activation during reward processing. A reduction of self-reported PA in daily life is consistently reported in individuals with current MDD. Here, we aimed to test (1) whether increased family risk of depression is associated with blunted neural and self-reported reward responses. (2) the stress-reward interactions at the neural level. We expected a stronger reduction of reward-related striatal activation under stress in FHD individuals compared to HC. (3) the associations between fMRI and daily life self-reported data on reward and stress experiences, with a specific interest in the striatum as a crucial region for reward processing. Method: Participants were 16 asymptomatic young adults with FHD and 16 controls (HC). They performed the Fribourg Reward Task with and without stress induction, using event-related fMRI. We conducted whole-brain analyses comparing the two groups for the main effect of reward (rewarded > not-rewarded) during reward feedback in control (no-stress) and stress conditions. Beta weights extracted from significant activation in this contrast were correlated with self-reported PA and negative affect (NA) assessed over 1 week. Results: Under stress induction, the reward-related activation in the ventral striatum (VS) was higher in the FHD group than in the HC group. Unexpectedly, we did not find significant group differences in the self-reported daily life PA measures. During stress induction, VS reward-related activation correlated positively with PA in both groups and negatively with NA in the HC group. Conclusion: As expected, our results indicate that increased family risk of depression was associated with specific striatum reactivity to reward in a stress condition, and support previous findings that ventral striatal reward-related response is associated with PA. A new unexpected finding is the negative association between NA and reward-related ventral striatal activation in the HC group. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-01-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7873952/ /pubmed/33584359 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.563475 Text en Copyright © 2021 Martin-Soelch, Guillod, Gaillard, Recabarren, Federspiel, Mueller-Pfeiffer, Homan, Hasler, Schoebi, Horsch and Gomez. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychiatry
Martin-Soelch, Chantal
Guillod, Matthias
Gaillard, Claudie
Recabarren, Romina Evelyn
Federspiel, Andrea
Mueller-Pfeiffer, Christoph
Homan, Philipp
Hasler, Gregor
Schoebi, Dominik
Horsch, Antje
Gomez, Patrick
Increased Reward-Related Activation in the Ventral Striatum During Stress Exposure Associated With Positive Affect in the Daily Life of Young Adults With a Family History of Depression. Preliminary Findings
title Increased Reward-Related Activation in the Ventral Striatum During Stress Exposure Associated With Positive Affect in the Daily Life of Young Adults With a Family History of Depression. Preliminary Findings
title_full Increased Reward-Related Activation in the Ventral Striatum During Stress Exposure Associated With Positive Affect in the Daily Life of Young Adults With a Family History of Depression. Preliminary Findings
title_fullStr Increased Reward-Related Activation in the Ventral Striatum During Stress Exposure Associated With Positive Affect in the Daily Life of Young Adults With a Family History of Depression. Preliminary Findings
title_full_unstemmed Increased Reward-Related Activation in the Ventral Striatum During Stress Exposure Associated With Positive Affect in the Daily Life of Young Adults With a Family History of Depression. Preliminary Findings
title_short Increased Reward-Related Activation in the Ventral Striatum During Stress Exposure Associated With Positive Affect in the Daily Life of Young Adults With a Family History of Depression. Preliminary Findings
title_sort increased reward-related activation in the ventral striatum during stress exposure associated with positive affect in the daily life of young adults with a family history of depression. preliminary findings
topic Psychiatry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7873952/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33584359
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.563475
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