Effects of stress-induced inflammation on reward processing in healthy young women

Chloe C Boyle, Annette L Stanton, Naomi I Eisenberger, Teresa E Seeman, Julienne E Bower, Chloe C Boyle, Annette L Stanton, Naomi I Eisenberger, Teresa E Seeman, Julienne E Bower

Abstract

Background: Anhedonia, or loss of interest or pleasure, is a feature of depression and transdiagnostic construct in psychopathology. Theory and compelling evidence from preclinical models implicates stress-induced inflammation as a psychobiological pathway to anhedonic behavior; however, this pathway has not been tested in human models. Further, although anhedonia may reflect dysregulation in multiple dimensions of reward, the extent to which stress-induced inflammation alters these dimensions is unclear. Thus, the current experimental study used a standardized laboratory stressor task to elicit an inflammatory response and evaluate effects of stress-induced inflammation on multiple behavioral indices of reward processing.

Methods: Healthy young women (age 18-25) completed behavioral reward tasks assessing reward learning, motivation, and sensitivity and were randomized to undergo an acute psychosocial stressor (n = 37) or a no-stress active control (n = 17). Tasks were re-administered 90-120 min post-stress to coincide with the peak of the stress-induced inflammatory response. Blood samples were collected for assessment of the pro-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6) at baseline and 90 and 120 min post stressor.

Results: Stress-induced IL-6 was associated with increased response bias during reward learning and increased motivation when probability of receiving a reward was low. Sensitivity to reward in the context of a motivation task was not altered in association with stress-induced IL-6.

Conclusions: Contrary to hypotheses, mild increases in IL-6 following acute stress were associated with increased reward responsiveness during reward learning and selective increases in motivation. Results contribute to an emerging and nuanced literature linking inflammation to reward processing, and demonstrate that behavioral effects of stress-induced inflammation may be detected in the laboratory setting.

Clinical trial registration: NCT03828604.

Keywords: Anhedonia; Depression; Inflammation; Reward learning; Reward motivation; Reward responsiveness; Reward sensitivity; Stress.

Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Competing Interest

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.
Consort diagram.
Fig. 2.
Fig. 2.
Adjusted means for change in IL-6 (log transformed) from baseline to 120 min post P-TSST/TSST.
Fig. 3.
Fig. 3.
Raw IL-6 values at pre and 120min post the P-TSST and TSST for all participants.

Source: PubMed

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