Oral sucrose stimulation increases accumbens dopamine in the rat.
Journal
  American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology.
Citation
  Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 286(1):R31-7
Publication date
  2004 Jan
Authors
  Hajnal A
Smith GP
Norgren R
Investigators
  Andras Hajnal
Ralph Norgren
Grant agencies
  National Institute on Deafness and other Communication Disorders
Grants
  NIDCD DC-00240
NIDCD DC-04751
MeSH headings
  Dopamine
Nucleus Accumbens
Sucrose
MeSH qualifiers
  metabolism
drug effects
administration & dosage
Abstract
  Although taste can influence meal size and body weight, the neural substrate for these effects remains obscure. Dopamine, particularly in the nucleus accumbens, has been implicated in both natural and nonnatural rewards. To isolate the orosensory effects of taste from possible postingestive consequences, we investigated the quantitative relationship between sham feeding of sucrose and extracellular dopamine in the nucleus accumbens with microdialysis in rats. Sucrose intake linearly increased as a function of concentration (0.03 M, 18.07 +/- 2.41 ml; 0.1 M, 30.92 +/- 2.60 ml; 0.3 M, 43.28 +/- 2.88 ml). Sham feeding also stimulated accumbens dopamine overflow as a function of sucrose solution concentration (0.03 M, 120.76 +/- 2.6%; 0.1 M, 140.28 +/- 7.8%; 0.3 M, 146.27 +/- 5.05%). A second experiment used the same protocol but clamped the amount of sucrose ingested and revealed a similar, concentration-dependent dopamine activation in the nucleus accumbens. This is the first demonstration of a quantitative relationship between the concentration-dependent rewarding effect of orosensory stimulation by sucrose during eating and the overflow of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens. This finding provides new and strong support for accumbens dopamine in the rewarding effect of sucrose.