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Dopaminergic modulation of stress-induced alterations in goal-directed behaviour and associated brain activation
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  • Peter van Ruitenbeek,
  • Conny Quaedflieg,
  • Bart Hartogsveld,
  • Tom Smeets
Peter van Ruitenbeek
Maastricht University

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Conny Quaedflieg
Maastricht University
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Bart Hartogsveld
Maastricht University
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Tom Smeets
Tilburg University
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Abstract

Background and purpose: Being exposed to acute stress may cause people to behave more habitual, which purportedly is associated stress-induced increased dopamine release. In contrast, experimental rises in systemic dopamine levels have been shown to increase goal-directed behaviour and, thus, decrease habitual control. Whether experimentally increased dopamine functioning can modulate stress-induced reductions in goal-directed behaviour and its neural substrates, is currently unknown. Experimental approach: To assess whether increased dopamine functioning reduces stress effects on goal-directed behaviour, 100 participants were recruited who were randomly assigned to one of four conditions in a 2x2 between participants design. Participants underwent a stress induction protocol (Maastricht Acute Stress Test; MAST) or a control procedure and received methylphenidate (40 mg, oral) or placebo. In a well-established instrumental learning paradigm, participants were trained to learn stimulus-response-outcome associations, after which rewards were selectively devalued and participants’ goal-directed behaviour was assessed at peak cortisol/methylphenidate concentrations in a magnetic resonance imaging scanner to assess brain activation. Key results: The MAST effectively increased physiological measures of stress (salivary cortisol, blood pressure) and subjective stress. Methylphenidate also increased cortisol levels over time. While stress selectively reduced goal-directed behaviour, this effect was not modulated by methylphenidate. However, methylphenidate modulated stress effects on activation in paracingulate, orbitofrontal cortex, and anterior cingulate associated with expected value representation in goal-directed behaviour. Conclusion and implications: Our neuroimaging data suggest increased dopamine levels reverse stress-induced changes in brain activation associated with goal-directed behaviour. These effects may be relevant for preventing stress-induced relapse in addictive behaviour.