Gustatory reward and the nucleus accumbens.
Journal
  Physiology & behavior.
Citation
  Physiol Behav. 89(4):531-5
Publication date
  2006 Nov 30
Authors
  Norgren R
Hajnal A
Mungarndee SS
Investigators
  Andras Hajnal
Ralph Norgren
Grant agencies
  National Institute on Deafness and other Communication Disorders
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
Grants
  NIDCD DC00240
NIDCD DC05435
NIDDK DK065709
MeSH headings
  Association Learning
Dopamine
Nucleus Accumbens
Reward
Taste
MeSH qualifiers
  physiology
metabolism
Abstract
  The concept of reward is central to psychology, but remains a cipher for neuroscience. Considerable evidence implicates dopamine in the process of reward and much of the data derives from the nucleus accumbens. Gustatory stimuli are widely used for animal studies of reward, but the connections between the taste and reward systems are unknown. In a series of experiments, our laboratory has addressed this issue using functional neurochemistry and neuroanatomy. First, using microdialysis probes, we demonstrated that sapid sucrose releases dopamine in the nucleus accumbens. The effect is dependent on oral stimulation and concentration. We subsequently determined that this response was independent of the thalamocortical gustatory system, but substantially blunted by damage to the parabrachial limbic taste projection. Further experiments using c-fos histochemistry confirmed that the limbic pathway was the prime carrier for the gustatory afferent activity that drives accumbens dopamine release.