HOME >> BIOLOGY >> NEWS
Pitt researchers find 'switch' for brain's pleasure pathway

Amid reports that a drug used to treat Parkinson's disease has caused some patients to become addicted to gambling and sex, University of Pittsburgh researchers have published a study that sheds light on what may have gone wrong.

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.


'"/>

Contact: Karen Hoffmann
klh52@pitt.edu
412-624-4356
University of Pittsburgh
22-Mar-2006


Page: 1

Related biology news :

1. Innovative tagging technique may help researchers better protect fish stocks
2. Penn researchers discover how key protein stops inflammation
3. ASU researchers partner with UOP to make biofuel for military jets a reality
4. Einstein researchers prototype vaccine could provide improved protection against tuberculosis
5. Penn researchers discover pathway that eliminates genetic defects in red blood cells
6. U-M researchers find family of on switches that cause prostate cancer
7. 2007 EURYI: 20 young researchers to receive Nobel Prize-sized awards for breakthrough ideas
8. Pets could be source of multiresistant bacteria infections in humans, MU researchers investigate
9. MGH researchers confirm that bone marrow restores fertility in female mice
10. Smithsonians National Zoo researchers use electronic eggs to help save threatened species
11. U-M researchers identify gene involved in breast cancer

Post Your Comments:
*Name:
*Comment:
*Email:
TAG: Pitt researchers find switch for brain pleasure pathway

(Date:5/18/2013)... An increasing number of U.S. children are experiencing ... to research presented at Digestive Disease Week (DDW). ... at the Cleveland Clinic Children,s Hospital found that ... breath compared to their lean counterparts. The pattern ... can be correlated to potential complications associated with ...
(Date:5/17/2013)... of New Jersey, and City University of New York ... that effectively clears organisms to be viewed under ... hydrate, which is one of the few high-quality clearing ... the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) due to its use ... are vital for viewing organisms under a microscope. Without ...
(Date:5/17/2013)... 17, 2013, Shenzhen, China---- Why Tibetan antelope can ... Plateau? In a collaborative research published in ... and other institutes provide evidence that some genetic ... to harsh highland environments. The data in this ... genetic mechanisms and the biology of other ruminant ...
Breaking Biology News(10 mins):New research identifies risks, interventions for children's GI health 2New research identifies risks, interventions for children's GI health 3New formula invented for microscope viewing, substitutes for federally controlled drug 2New formula invented for microscope viewing, substitutes for federally controlled drug 3The genome sequence of Tibetan antelope sheds new light on high-altitude adaptation 2
(Date:5/17/2013)... occurs when the transplant recipient,s immune system identifies the ... was previously thought that T cells, the immune cells ... known as chemokines in order to migrate to the ... of Clinical Investigation , Fadi Lakkis and colleagues at ... chemokine stimulation of T cells is not required for ...
(Date:5/17/2013)... PHILADELPHIA , May 17, 2013 ... held by the most innovative thought leaders of ... Device & Manufacturing East conference and expo, from ...      (Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130517/613829 ) ... were designed to deliver industry professionals practical presentations ...
(Date:5/17/2013)... 2013 Men’s skin is biologically different than ... ) and has been known to react more aggressively when ... be far from puberty, other acne causing factors like P.acnes ... and threatening skin with unsightly acne scars. Adult acne treatment, ... Health on how to reduce and prevent acne scarring. ...
(Date:5/17/2013)... 17, 2013 Tooth decay is an epidemic ... signs of the disease. The World Health Organization says that ... of adults have cavities. What are the long-term effects of ... a strong connection between the oral bacterial imbalance and serious ... so rampant, yet it is also 100% preventable? Answer: there ...
Breaking Biology Technology:MedTech Innovate Seminars: New Interactive Learning Forums at 2013 MD&M East 2Adult Acne Treatment, Probiotic Action Shares New Insight on Why Men’s Skin Scars from Acne and How to Prevent It 2Seeing the Future: How a Revolutionary New Bacterial Screening Device Can Predict a Patient’s Future for Tooth Decay 2Seeing the Future: How a Revolutionary New Bacterial Screening Device Can Predict a Patient’s Future for Tooth Decay 3
Cached News: