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In the current issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Pitt
professor of neuroscience, psychiatry, and psychology Anthony Grace and Pitt
neuroscience research associate Daniel Lodge suggest a new mechanism for how
the brain's reward system works.

The main actor in the reward system is a chemical called dopamine. When you
smell, touch, hear, see, or taste a pleasurable stimulus, the dopamine
neurons in your brain start firing in bursts. So-called "burst firing" is how
the brain signals reward and modulates goal-directed behavior. But just how
the stimulus you perceive causes neurons to switch into or out of this mode
has been a mystery.

Using anesthetized rats, Lodge and Grace found that one area in the brain
stem, known as the laterodorsal tegmental nucleus, is critical to normal
dopamine function.

"We've found, for the first time, the brain area that acts as the gate,
telling neurons either to go into this communication mode or to stop
communicating," says Grace. "All the other parts of the brain that talk to
the dopamine neurons can only do it when this area puts them into the
communication mode."




 As a result, disruption in that area may play a major role in
dopamine-related brain function, both in normal behaviors and psychiatric
disorders.

The brain area identified by the Pitt researchers is regulated by the
"planning" part of the brain, the prefrontal cortex (PFC), thereby providing
a powerful indirect means for the PFC to affect the activity of dopamine
neurons. Such a link could explain how changes in the PFC, seen in disorders
like schizophrenia and drug addiction, disrupt the signaling of dopamine
neurons.

Source: University of Pittsburgh

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