[HTML][HTML] Endocannabinoid hedonic hotspot for sensory pleasure: anandamide in nucleus accumbens shell enhances 'liking'of a sweet reward

SV Mahler, KS Smith, KC Berridge - Neuropsychopharmacology, 2007 - nature.com
Neuropsychopharmacology, 2007nature.com
Cannabinoid drugs such as Δ 9-THC are euphoric and rewarding, and also stimulate food
intake in humans and animals. Little is known about how naturally occurring endogenous
brain cannabinoids mediate pleasure from food or other natural sensory rewards. The taste
reactivity paradigm measures effects of brain manipulations on affective orofacial reactions
to intraorally administered pleasant and unpleasant tastes. Here we tested if anandamide
microinjection into medial nucleus accumbens shell enhances these affective reactions to …
Abstract
Cannabinoid drugs such as Δ 9-THC are euphoric and rewarding, and also stimulate food intake in humans and animals. Little is known about how naturally occurring endogenous brain cannabinoids mediate pleasure from food or other natural sensory rewards. The taste reactivity paradigm measures effects of brain manipulations on affective orofacial reactions to intraorally administered pleasant and unpleasant tastes. Here we tested if anandamide microinjection into medial nucleus accumbens shell enhances these affective reactions to sweet and bitter tastes in rats. Anandamide doubled the number of positive ‘liking’reactions elicited by intraoral sucrose, without altering negative ‘disliking’reactions to bitter quinine. Anandamide microinjections produced Fos plumes of approximately 0.02–1 mm 3 volume. Plume-based maps, integrated with behavioral data, identified the medial shell of accumbens as the anatomical hotspot responsible for hedonic amplification. Anandamide produced especially intense hedonic enhancement in a roughly 1.6 mm 3 ‘hedonic hotspot’in dorsal medial shell, where anandamide also stimulated eating behavior. These results demonstrate that endocannabinoid signals within medial accumbens shell specifically amplify the positive hedonic impact of a natural reward (though identification of the receptor specificity of this effect will require future studies). Identification of an endocannabinoid hotspot for sensory pleasure gives insight into brain mechanisms of natural reward, and may be relevant to understanding the neural effects of cannabinoid drugs of abuse and therapeutic agents.
nature.com