Pause for thought: The role of corticostriatal circuitry and its dopamine innervation in the inhibitory modulation of associative learning

Lead Research Organisation: University of Nottingham
Department Name: Sch of Psychology

Abstract

The nuts and bolts of everyday thinking, provided by the formation of connections between related events, enable us to establish clear trains of thought. Associative learning mechanisms, common to all animals, support not only the cueing of thoughts, words and deeds, but also the ability to hesitate through the use of a 'mental brake' to suppress inappropriate thoughts and actions. When the ability to restrain the impulse generated by an association is lost, diverse symptoms may result. Clinically, impaired inhibitory modulation has been identified as contributing to a number of disorders, including addiction, anxiety, obesity and schizophrenia. Disinhibited behaviours are also a well-documented feature of the cognitive decline characteristic of normal ageing.

Learning procedures developed in the laboratory rat provide an excellent model system to study the gating of unwanted associations. If a particular event predicts an outcome, learning is normally demonstrated by the animal's behavioural reaction to the first event. However, if the first event is presented in conjunction with another cue which means that the expected outcome will not now occur, the normal behavioural and cognitive reactions are inhibited. Impairments in such inhibition could explain a variety of symptoms, from over-eating when the consequences of eating more food will no longer be pleasant, to some of the disordered thought patterns identified with schizophrenia. We propose to use translational procedures in the rat, adapting the experimental design which we have used to test inhibitory learning in humans, in order to delineate the brain areas involved in inhibitory learning. The experimental brain treatments will be precisely targeted to areas known to be important for behavioural regulation and which receive projections containing the brain chemical dopamine implicated in the modulation of inhibitory learning. Highly controlled experiments of the kind proposed are necessary to identify the mechanisms underlying inhibitory learning deficits.

We will (1) examine the effects of temporarily switching off small areas of cortex and interconnected areas (injecting a shortlived inactivating drug); (2) test for cross-talk in the patterns of electrical activity in interconnected brain areas; (3) use drug treatments to selectively manipulate the brain chemical dopamine, to determine the precise pathways through which inhibitory learning is modulated; and (4) examine how the observed behavioural effects depend on cross-talk between interconnected brain regions.

The present project will advance previous findings in that we will selectively interfere with chemical signalling in specific brain pathways, by targeted drug delivery to areas first identified by temporarily inactivating small brain regions. One unique contribution of the present project will be the delineation of the role of the chemical modulator dopamine in the neural circuitry necessary for inhibitory learning. Other studies in our laboratory have shown that localised drug treatments with some selectivity to particular sites of action can have distinct effects on behaviour, often quite different to the effects of general brain damage in the same brain regions. Importantly, the behavioural procedures to be used in this project work in humans too; although the experimental details differ, there is sufficient similarity to translate findings from the animal laboratory to the clinic (and vice versa). Experiments in rats delineate the brain substrates of inhibitory learning and give vital clues as to where and how new treatments should work, with minimum side-effects.

In parallel with the experimental programme, we will visit schools and use sixth form outreach programmes, as well as liaise with mental health professionals and contacts in the pharmaceutical industry, to explain the importance of animal work of this kind, and how it translates to our understanding of human health.

Technical Summary

Conditioned inhibition is a form of learning seen when an otherwise expected event does not occur in the presence of the inhibitor. Such inhibitory modulation is fundamental to many aspects of normal psychological function, such as the control of food intake, while impairments in this process underpin a wide variety of mental health conditions. We have found that this kind of inhibitory learning is impaired in humans with schizophrenia (as well as those with particular personality profiles) and have adapted the experimental design for use in rats, with a refined appetitive procedure, to investigate the role of the dopamine (DA) system and interconnected cortical structures, specifically medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). We will use this translational task to analyse the role of corticostriatal DA in inhibitory modulation, with a view to developing novel therapeutic strategies. The mPFC and DA systems have been independently identified as being involved in aspects of inhibition. The proposed plan of work will advance on these findings by testing for dissociable effects in mPFC sub-regions. Moreover, the mPFC projects topographically to nucleus accumbens (NAc) in the striatum, which is also a functionally heterogenous structure. We will compare the effects of (1) regional inactivation and (2) electrophysiological profiles in NAc and the corresponding sub-regions in mPFC, to identify functional interactions between the two structures. We will go on to investigate the role of particular DA receptor sub-types in a series of micro-infusion studies at the coordinates identified in the regional inactivation studies. This will allow us to examine the modulatory role of DA in the key brain regions of interest. The proposed use of a translational task in a rat model allows for localised interventions (including disconnection studies using crossed unilateral infusions) to establish cause and effect, combined with correlational studies of interconnectivity of small sub-regions.

Planned Impact

In addition to the academic beneficiaries described above, the research proposed here will have wider benefits. The workplan attachment (Gantt chart) shows how the proposed impact activities will be interleaved with the experimental milestones and scientific objectives over the course of the project.

PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY: A wide variety of conditions are characterised by inhibition deficits of one kind or another. In some cases, inhibitory impairment is fundamental to the condition, in others it is symptomatic. Disinhibition is nonetheless troubling and potentially very disruptive to normal cognitive function. Prospectively, selective neural interventions will be developed as cognitive enhancers to counteract deficits in inhibitory modulation. Identifying the role of neuromodulation in inhibitory learning and its expression will be key to future development of selective treatment interventions either to increase activity or enhance neuroplasticity in identified brain circuitries, depending on the nature of the target impairment. Many of the scientific meetings we attend offer opportunities to discuss our findings with representatives of the pharmaceutical industry. In addition, Elaine Anderson, University of Nottingham Business Engagement and Innovation Services, is approaching a range of companies, to negotiate material transfer agreements that will enable us to test whether inhibitory learning deficits can be reversed by novel compounds of interest. Using the same experimental design in analogous behavioural tasks, we have conducted a series of studies of inhibitory learning in diverse human populations, some with diagnosed clinical conditions, also to examine the role of individual differences in the normal range. Data, of the kind to be generated by the present project, on the underlying neural substrates (in medial prefrontal cortex and nucleus accumbens) and neuropharmacology - examining effects at dopaminergic receptor sub-types - will tell us where targeted brain interventions should be applied (in principle, when they become available). For example, using selective regulation of gene expression in particular signalling pathways, as well as non-invasive treatments such as rTMS.

CHARITIES: The University of Nottingham has established links with the charitable sector and their representatives are invited to engagement events, such as 'Healthy Brains at Every Age' which was recently hosted by the School of Psychology in collaboration with Cambridge Cognition. Various mental health charities and other stakeholders will be invited to outreach and engagement events arranged over the course of the current project (see also Pathways to Impact).

HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONALS: The Nottingham University Hospital NHS Trust provides further points of contact to discuss the translational relevance of our findings.

MANAGED ANIMALS: Evidence-based welfare is fundamental to best practice. The proposed behavioural tests measure fundamental mechanisms of animal cognition, performance of which will be related to measures of neurochemical function. The rat is a good model system for a wide range of mammalian species.

SCHOOLS: Outreach activities are an invaluable part of our widening participation programme, to attract the best university applicants to our BSc courses, irrespective of background and prior expectations. Additionally, Understanding Animal Research school visits allow the benefits of essential animal research to be communicated to school children. The experiences provided by our outreach activities help prospective undergraduates make informed decisions about what to study at university. Young people also appreciate the opportunity to discuss the use of animals in research in relation to evidence, and to have their specific questions answered. Feedback suggests that this kind of activity is particularly effective when they have the opportunity to engage with younger researchers.
 
Title Creative Reactions: Art and the Human Mind 
Description SciArt collaboration between Rebecca Hock (PDRA) with artist Gabrielle Hoad (published on the Pint of Science website https://pintofscience.co.uk/blog/art-and-the-human-mind/). 
Type Of Art Film/Video/Animation 
Year Produced 2021 
Impact Public understanding of the use of rodent models. Concepts of associative learning and the clinical relevance of inhibitory modulation are presented in accessible format to raise public awareness of how this kind of research is identifying underlying mechanisms of (and potential treatment targets for) diverse mental health issues, such as addiction and anxiety. 
URL https://pintofscience.co.uk/blog/art-and-the-human-mind
 
Description At the staff training stage, we completed 3 behavioural pilots, to ensure that our parameters were suitable for use with the Wistar strain previously used in cannulation studies of the kind planned in the present project (Objectives 1,3,4). These behavioural pilots included a strain comparison study (showing some Wistar advantage) and the findings have been published in Physiology & Behavior.
A surgery pilot was used for training and to test the effects of muscimol in nucleus accumbens sub-regions as measured by locomotor activity (which is our positive control for the infusion effectiveness). Then followed a small cannulation study, again using micro-infusion of muscimol, to test the effects of regional inactivation on inhibitory learning (Objective 1). While surgery was in abeyance (due to the Covid pandemic) we conducted three drug studies with systemic amphetamines (as the ground work for Objectives 3&4). We find the expression of inhibitory learning (at the retardation test) was impaired in animals which had acquired the inhibitory discrimination under d-amphetamine. Follow-up studies included some variations in the behavioural procedure, and a 'stage of procedure' study, to inform the cannulation studies with dopaminergic agents (Objectives 3&4).
We have since completed three full cannulation studies (conducted in 6 replications) in sub-regions of prefrontal cortex. We presented the effects of regional inactivation produced using muscimol at FENS summer 2022, for feedback prior to submission for publication. The follow up study in prefrontal cortex was with the dopamine D1-like agonist SKF 81297. We have also completed three replications of a cannulation study in nucleus accumbens.
We have completed our literature searches and tabulated key findings and methods of inhibitory learning studies conducted. Of 1651 papers examined, 87 met our inclusion criteria for studies of conditioned inhibition, feature negative discrimination or differential inhibition and included some reference to the underpinning neural substrates (all published since 1990; searches conducted in Scopus). Other papers already known to the authors were also included if they met the inclusion criteria. A review article will be submitted for open access publication to raise the profile of our findings (Objectives 1,3,4).
Exploitation Route Impaired inhibitory learning interfaces with impulse control, which shares dopaminergic substrates in prefrontal cortex, and is atypical in a number of mental health conditions. We have reported impaired inhibitory learning in a population of offenders and in participants with schizophrenia and the same translational procedures have been used to study individual differences in the normal range. Impulse control also underpins the self-regulation needed to maintain good dietary habits. The clinical significance of inhibitory learning and our understanding of its neural substrates has been highlighted in a couple of recent reviews by another group (which cite our earlier studies with human participants), confirming the relevance of the project outcomes to healthcare and pharmaceutical sectors. I co-authored a review with a former student while the lab research has been in abeyance, on the clinical applications of inhibitory learning. A shortened version of this has since been published attributed to this grant.
Sectors Healthcare,Pharmaceuticals and Medical Biotechnology

 
Description Blue Bell Hill School visit 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact We supported a PhD student as the team leader preparing an hour long lesson on Pavlovian learning for year 5 students and liaising with the primary school to arrange appropriate dates and times. This was successfully delivered (March 2020) but the follow up sessions were cancelled due to lockdown.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
 
Description Festival of Science and Curiosity: Aspley Library February 2020. 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact This engagement activity involved various psychology/ neuroscience related activities with young children. We supported a PhD student to gain experience at the 'brain hats and pipe cleaner neurons' station. She estimates that she personally engaged with up to about 50 children during her placement (the event overall attracted a much larger number of people).
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
 
Description Online public engagement - survey style (selected closest activity option) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact We made use of existing baseline data (N=190) for an online intervention study to examine the impact of exposure to the present project's technical summary versus our lay summary (extract matched for word length) on attitudes to animal use. It is commonly assumed that the more accessible lay summaries (which can be freely accessed via the UKRI website) should improve public understanding of UKRI-funded work, We aimed to test the prediction that reading the lay (but not the technical) summary should improve public understanding of attitudes to animal use and reduce potential biases related to the nature of the research.
Specifically, we used a version of our Animal Purpose Questionnaire (e.g. Royal Society Open Science, 7, 191162), in this case restricted to medical research purposes by category of illness/condition, in order to examine the effects of public perception as psychological vs physical and controllable vs uncontrollable illness/condition (as moderators of attitudes to animal use). The project lay summary describes the relevance of our basic science research to a range of illnesses and health conditions, with specific mention of addiction, schizophrenia and obesity. We collected systematic data on its effectiveness in shaping reported attitudes to animal use as a function of research purpose and its perceived worthiness. Open access publication of our findings will extend the reach of this activity. The manuscript reporting these findings is now under review.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021,2022
 
Description Wonder: A community event held at the University Park Campus June 2019 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an open day or visit at my research institution
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact We supported two PhD students to engage in a brain-related outreach activity involving a 'hands-on' demo of how the brain works, using a life-sized model plastic brain with ~ 8 parts (which can be taken apart and put back together easily by school-aged children, with help if needed), stuffed toy brain cells, Slinky toys, and stencils for colouring. This activity also included demonstration of how different parts of the brain communicate with each other via oscillatory activity, achieved by having participants hold a Slinky between two stuffed toy brain cells and then move them to create 'waves' with the Slinky. Examples of specific brain functions that involve communication between different parts of the brain (e.g. learning and memory) were embedded in this activity.
The event was attended by 4000-5000 participants on the day, most of whom were families (children with parents/carers). The feedback received was very positive.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
URL https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/wonder/