Abstract

BackgroundNovelty-seeking (NS) and impulsive personality traits have been proposed to reflect an interplay between fronto-cortical and limbic systems, including the limbic striatum (LS). Although neuroimaging studies have provided some evidence for this, most are comprised of small samples and many report surprisingly large effects given the challenges of trying to relate a snapshot of brain function or structure to an entity as complex as personality. The current work tested a priori hypotheses about associations between striatal dopamine (DA) release, cortical thickness (CT), and NS in a large sample of healthy adults.MethodsFifty-two healthy adults (45M/7F; age: 23.8±4.93) underwent two positron emission tomography scans with [11C]raclopride (specific for striatal DA D2/3 receptors) with or without amphetamine (0.3 mg/kg, p.o.). Structural magnetic resonance image scans were acquired, as were Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire data. Amphetamine-induced changes in [11C]raclopride binding potential values (ΔBPND) were examined in the limbic, sensorimotor (SMS) and associative (AST) striatum. CT measures, adjusted for whole brain volume, were extracted from the dorsolateral sensorimotor and ventromedial/limbic cortices.ResultsBPND values were lower in the amphetamine vs. no-drug sessions, with the largest effect in the LS. When comparing low vs. high LS ΔBPND groups (median split), higher NS2 (impulsiveness) scores were found in the high ΔBPND group. Partial correlations (age and gender as covariates) yielded a negative relation between ASTS ΔBPND and sensorimotor CT; trends for inverse associations existed between ΔBPND values in other striatal regions and frontal CT. In other words, the greater the amphetamine-induced striatal DA response, the thinner the frontal cortex.ConclusionsThese data expand upon previously reported associations between striatal DA release in the LS and both NS related impulsiveness and CT in the largest sample reported to date. The findings add to the plausibility of these associations while suggesting that the effects are likely weaker than has been previously proposed.

Highlights

  • Impulsive novelty seeking (NS) traits have been proposed to reflect individual differences in meso-striatal dopamine (DA) transmission [1],[2] and aspects of cortical morphometry, including grey matter volume and cortical thickness (CT) [3],[4]

  • BPND values were lower in the amphetamine vs. no-drug sessions, with the largest effect in the limbic striatum (LS)

  • When comparing low vs. high LS ΔBPND groups, higher NS2 scores were found in the high ΔBPND group

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Summary

Introduction

Impulsive novelty seeking (NS) traits have been proposed to reflect individual differences in meso-striatal dopamine (DA) transmission [1],[2] and aspects of cortical morphometry, including grey matter volume and cortical thickness (CT) [3],[4]. Since much of this work has been conducted in small samples, and rarely with the same measure of impulsivity, in the current study, we investigated—for the first time—the relation between NS, CT and amphetamine-induced striatal DA release (via regression analyses) in the largest sample of healthy adults reported to date. The current work tested a priori hypotheses about associations between striatal dopamine (DA) release, cortical thickness (CT), and NS in a large sample of healthy adults

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