A unidirectional but not uniform striatal landscape of dopamine signaling for motivational stimuli

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2022 May 24;119(21):e2117270119. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2117270119. Epub 2022 May 20.

Abstract

Dopamine signals in the striatum are critical for motivated behavior. However, their regional specificity and precise information content are actively debated. Dopaminergic projections to the striatum are topographically organized. Thus, we quantified dopamine release in response to motivational stimuli and associated predictive cues in six principal striatal regions of unrestrained, behaving rats. Absolute signal size and its modulation by stimulus value and by subjective state of the animal were interregionally heterogeneous on a medial to lateral gradient. In contrast, dopamine-concentration direction of change was homogeneous across all regions: appetitive stimuli increased and aversive stimuli decreased dopamine concentration. Although cues predictive of such motivational stimuli acquired the same influence over dopamine homogeneously across all regions, dopamine-mediated prediction-error signals were restricted to the ventromedial, limbic striatum. Together, our findings demonstrate a nuanced striatal landscape of unidirectional but not uniform dopamine signals, topographically encoding distinct aspects of motivational stimuli and their prediction.

Keywords: Pavlovian conditioning; behavior; dopamine; motivation; striatum.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Corpus Striatum*
  • Dopamine*
  • Learning
  • Motivation
  • Reward

Substances

  • Dopamine