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Home > Journal Club & Teaching

Journal Club & Teaching

Cholinergic modulation of dopamine release drives effortful behavior

Abstract

Effort is costly: given a choice, we tend to avoid it1. But in many cases, effort adds value to the ensuing rewards2. From ants3 to humans4, individuals prefer rewards that had been harder to achieve. This counterintuitive process may promote reward-seeking even in resource-poor environments, thus enhancing evolutionary fitness5. Despite its ubiquity, the neural mechanisms supporting this behavioral effect are poorly understood. Here we show that effort amplifies the dopamine response to an otherwise identical reward, and this amplification depends on local modulation of dopamine axons by acetylcholine. High-effort rewards evoke rapid acetylcholine release from local interneurons in the nucleus accumbens. Acetylcholine then binds to nicotinic receptors on dopamine axon terminals to augment dopamine release when reward is delivered. Blocking the cholinergic modulation blunts dopamine release selectively in high-effort contexts, impairing effortful behavior while leaving low-effort reward consumption intact. These results reconcile in vitro studies, which have long demonstrated that acetylcholine can trigger dopamine release directly through dopamine axons6–11; with in vivo studies that failed to observe such modulation12–14, but did not examine high-effort contexts. Our findings uncover a mechanism that drives effortful behavior through context-dependent local interactions between acetylcholine and dopamine axons.


Gavin C. Touponse, Matthew B. Pomrenze, Teema Yassine, Viraj Mehta, Nicholas Denomme, Zihui Zhang, Robert C. Malenka, Neir Eshel. Cholinergic modulation of dopamine release drives effortful behavior. bioRxiv, 2025-06. [LINK]


Speaker: Yingjun Tang

Time: 9:00 am, 2025/09/01

Location: CIBR A622



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