Dopamine Depletion Reduces Food-Related Reward Activity Independent of BMI

被引:0
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作者
Sabine Frank
Ralf Veit
Helene Sauer
Paul Enck
Hans-Christoph Friederich
Theresa Unholzer
Ute-Maria Bauer
Katarzyna Linder
Martin Heni
Andreas Fritsche
Hubert Preissl
机构
[1] Institute for Medical Psychology and Behavioural Neurobiology,Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy
[2] University of Tübingen,Department of General Internal Medicine and Psychosomatics
[3] Institute for Diabetes Research and Metabolic Diseases of the Helmholtz Center Munich at the University of Tübingen,Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy
[4] Tübingen,Department of Internal Medicine IV
[5] German Center for Diabetes Research,Department of Pharmacy and Biochemistry
[6] University Hospital Tübingen,undefined
[7] University Hospital Heidelberg,undefined
[8] The University of Duisburg-Essen,undefined
[9] University Hospital Tübingen,undefined
[10] Faculty of Science,undefined
[11] University of Tübingen,undefined
来源
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2016年 / 41卷
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摘要
Reward sensitivity and possible alterations in the dopaminergic-reward system are associated with obesity. We therefore aimed to investigate the influence of dopamine depletion on food-reward processing. We investigated 34 female subjects in a randomized placebo-controlled, within-subject design (body mass index (BMI)=27.0 kg/m2 ±4.79 SD; age=28 years ±4.97 SD) using an acute phenylalanine/tyrosine depletion drink representing dopamine depletion and a balanced amino acid drink as the control condition. Brain activity was measured with functional magnetic resonance imaging during a ‘wanting’ and ‘liking’ rating of food items. Eating behavior-related traits and states were assessed on the basis of questionnaires. Dopamine depletion resulted in reduced activation in the striatum and higher activation in the superior frontal gyrus independent of BMI. Brain activity during the wanting task activated a more distributed network than during the liking task. This network included gustatory, memory, visual, reward, and frontal regions. An interaction effect of dopamine depletion and the wanting/liking task was observed in the hippocampus. The interaction with the covariate BMI was significant in motor and control regions but not in the striatum. Our results support the notion of altered brain activity in the reward and prefrontal network with blunted dopaminergic action during food-reward processing. This effect is, however, independent of BMI, which contradicts the reward-deficiency hypothesis. This hints to the hypothesis suggesting a different or more complex mechanism underlying the dopaminergic reward function in obesity.
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页码:1551 / 1559
页数:8
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