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[The Dope on] Dopamine's Central Role in the Brain's Motivation and Reward 
Networks
Researchers use two imaging methods to pinpoint dopamine as key chemical in 
human brain's pleasure and motivation circuits
 By Tabitha M. Powledge 
 
Researchers have for the first time found that the neurotransmitter dopamine 
is central to the human brain network governing motivation and a sense of 
reward and pleasure—and that it changes with age. The finding could provide 
clues to healthy, happy aging and pave the way to new treatments for 
neurological disorders, including Parkinson's disease and schizophrenia as 
well as addictive behaviors from alcoholism and drug abuse to compulsive 
gambling.
 
 The U.S. National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) team used two imaging 
methods, positron emission tomography (PET) and functional magnetic resonance 
imaging (fMRI), to examine the normal human brain reward circuit, a complex 
neurochemical network that centers around a path from the ventral tegmental 
area in the midbrain (where dopamine is synthesized) to the nucleus accumbens 
in the forebrain (where it is released). Comparing brain activity in 
volunteers playing video slot machines, the researchers identified processes 
involved both in anticipating a reward and actually getting one—and discerned 
age-dependent changes in those processes.
 
 Wolfram Schultz, a neuroscientist at the University of Cambridge in England, 
says the researchers "have tried to push the frontier" by combining two 
imaging techniques: fMRI, which measures time course, and the PET study, 
which measures dopamine synthesis rate. "This is a very smart combination," 
he says.
 
 The study, published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of 
Sciences USA, compared brain activity in 20 younger subjects (mean age 25) 
with that in 13 older ones (mean age 66), all in good health. "This is 
building a foundation upon which we can search for interventions when aging 
is not so successful or when this reward system is abnormal," says senior 
study author Karen Berman, chief of the integrative neuroimaging at NIMH's 
Clinical Brain Disorders Branch. Bruce Jenkins, director of neurochemical 
imaging at the Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging at Massachusetts 
General Hospital in Boston, praised the study, although he noted the small 
number of subjects. The next step, he said, should be to investigate the 
mechanism underlying the age-related changes.
 
 On tap: similar studies of people whose aging has not been successful or who 
suffer from dopamine-related states such as Parkinson's, depression and 
addictions. Berman says she and her NIMH colleagues have already launched 
such a study of schizophrenia, a disorder characterized both by 
hallucinations and loss of motivation. The malady has long been known to 
involve dopamine circuits.

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