Inheritance of Neural Substrates for Motivation and Pleasure

Author:

Li Zhi12,Wang Yi1,Yan Chao3,Cheung Eric F. C.4,Docherty Anna R.56,Sham Pak C.789,Gur Raquel E.10,Gur Ruben C.10,Chan Raymond C. K.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Neuropsychology and Applied Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, CAS Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences

2. Department of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences

3. Key Laboratory of Brain Functional Genomics, School of Psychology and Cognitive Science, East China Normal University

4. Castle Peak Hospital, Hong Kong, China

5. Department of Psychiatry, University of Utah School of Medicine

6. Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University

7. Centre for Genomic Sciences, The University of Hong Kong

8. State Key Laboratory in Brain and Cognitive Sciences, The University of Hong Kong

9. Department of Psychiatry, The University of Hong Kong

10. Department of Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania

Abstract

Despite advances in the understanding of the reward system and the role of dopamine in recent decades, the heritability of the underlying neural mechanisms is not known. In the present study, we examined the hemodynamic activation of the nucleus accumbens (NAcc), a key hub of the reward system, in 86 healthy monozygotic twins and 88 healthy dizygotic twins during a monetary-incentive-delay task. The participants also completed self-report measures of pleasure. Using voxelwise heritability mapping, we found that activation of the bilateral NAcc during the anticipation of monetary gains had significant heritability ( h2 = .20–.49). Moreover, significant shared genetic covariance was observed between pleasure and NAcc activation during the anticipation of monetary gain. These findings suggest that both NAcc activation and self-reported pleasure may be heritable and that their phenotypic correlation may be partially explained by shared genetic variation.

Funder

CAS Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology

national natural science foundation of china

chinese academy of sciences

the Beijing Training Project for the Leading Talents in Science and Technology

key technologies research and development program

beijing municipal science and technology commission

cas-safea international partnership program for creative research teams

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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