Low dopamine striatal D2 receptors are associated with prefrontal metabolism in obese subjects: possible contributing factors

Nora D Volkow, Gene-Jack Wang, Frank Telang, Joanna S Fowler, Panayotis K Thanos, Jean Logan, David Alexoff, Yu-Shin Ding, Christopher Wong, Yeming Ma, Kith Pradhan, Nora D Volkow, Gene-Jack Wang, Frank Telang, Joanna S Fowler, Panayotis K Thanos, Jean Logan, David Alexoff, Yu-Shin Ding, Christopher Wong, Yeming Ma, Kith Pradhan

Abstract

Dopamine's role in inhibitory control is well recognized and its disruption may contribute to behavioral disorders of discontrol such as obesity. However, the mechanism by which impaired dopamine neurotransmission interferes with inhibitory control is poorly understood. We had previously documented a reduction in dopamine D2 receptors in morbidly obese subjects. To assess if the reductions in dopamine D2 receptors were associated with activity in prefrontal brain regions implicated in inhibitory control we assessed the relationship between dopamine D2 receptor availability in striatum with brain glucose metabolism (marker of brain function) in ten morbidly obese subjects (BMI>40 kg/m(2)) and compared it to that in twelve non-obese controls. PET was used with [(11)C]raclopride to assess D2 receptors and with [(18)F]FDG to assess regional brain glucose metabolism. In obese subjects striatal D2 receptor availability was lower than controls and was positively correlated with metabolism in dorsolateral prefrontal, medial orbitofrontal, anterior cingulate gyrus and somatosensory cortices. In controls correlations with prefrontal metabolism were not significant but comparisons with those in obese subjects were not significant, which does not permit to ascribe the associations as unique to obesity. The associations between striatal D2 receptors and prefrontal metabolism in obese subjects suggest that decreases in striatal D2 receptors could contribute to overeating via their modulation of striatal prefrontal pathways, which participate in inhibitory control and salience attribution. The association between striatal D2 receptors and metabolism in somatosensory cortices (regions that process palatability) could underlie one of the mechanisms through which dopamine regulates the reinforcing properties of food.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Brain maps obtained with SPM showing the areas where the correlations between striatal D2 receptor availability and brain glucose metabolism were significant. Significance corresponds to P<0.005, uncorrected, cluster size>100 voxels.
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Regression slopes between DA D2 receptor availability (Bmax/Kd) and regional glucose metabolism (μmol/100 g/min) in prefrontal regions and in somatosensory cortex. The values for these correlations are shown in Table 2.

Source: PubMed

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