ABSTRACT: Differences in the prevalence and presentation of psychiatric illnesses in men and women suggest that neurobiological sex differences confer vulnerability or resilience in these disorders. Rodent behavioral models are critical for understanding the mechanisms of these differences. Reward processing and punishment avoidance are fundamental dimensions of the symptoms of psychiatric disorders. Here we explored sex differences along these dimensions using multiple and distinct behavioral paradigms. We found no sex difference in reward-guided associative learning but a faster punishment-avoidance learning in females. After learning, females were more sensitive than males to probabilistic punishment but less sensitive when punishment could be avoided with certainty. No sex differences were found in reward-guided cognitive flexibility. Thus, sex differences in goal-directed behaviors emerged selectively when there was an aversive context. These differences were critically sensitive to whether the punishment was certain or unpredictable. Our findings with these new paradigms provide conceptual and practical tools for investigating brain mechanisms that account for sex differences in susceptibility to anxiety and impulsivity. They may also provide insight for understanding the evolution of sex-specific optimal behavioral strategies in dynamic environments.
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INTRODUCTION
Men
and women show different rates of diagnosis, symptomology, and
treatment responsivity in most brain disorders. For instance, men are
more commonly diagnosed with schizophrenia, four times more likely to
suffer from attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) (Rowland, Lesesne, & Abramowitz, 2002), and twice as likely to be currently abusing illicit drugs (Abuse, 2013). On the other hand, major depressive disorder (MDD) and anxiety disorders are more common in women (Cyranowski, Frank, Young, & Shear, 2000). These patterns suggest that biological sex differences may underlie the disparities in vulnerability to these illnesses.
Reward-seeking
and punishment-avoidance behaviors are fundamental to motivation, and
are critical components of the pathophysiology of most psychiatric
illnesses. For example, studies have shown that patients with depressive
disorders (Pizzagalli et al., 2009), schizophrenia (Juckel, 2016; Kirsch, Ronshausen, Mier, & Gallhofer, 2007; Schlagenhauf et al., 2008), as well as ADHD (Scheres, Milham, Knutson, & Castellanos, 2007; Strohle et al., 2008)
have modified brain responses to reward. In particular, major
depression is associated with both a hyposensitivity to rewarding
stimuli and hypersensitivity to punishment, and associated imaging
findings are correlated with increasing frequency of depressive episodes
(Kumar et al., 2018).
Importantly, disorders where reward and aversive responding are
differently affected also show different incidences and symptom profiles
in women versus men. For example, in anxiety disorders there is an
increased avoidance of aversive stimuli that is more pronounced in women
(Sheynin et al., 2014).
Similarly, in MDD, men are more likely to exhibit symptoms of
aggression, substance abuse, and risky behavior, while females report
higher rates of sleep disturbance, stress, and anhedonia (L. A. Martin, Neighbors, & Griffith, 2013).
Similarly, it appears that sex influences substance abuse patterns,
with women more likely than men to cite stress as the reason for
initiating or relapsing drug use (Becker, McClellan, & Reed, 2017).
Finally,
in ADHD, females diagnosed with the disorder more frequently experience
comorbid anxiety and depression. These findings suggest that distinct
responses to punishment may explain some of the observed sex differences
in both the prevalence and expression of mental disorders.
Animal
models are critical for understanding the behavioral neuroscience of
sex differences, allowing assessment of motivated behaviors relevant to
psychiatric disorders. Animal behavioral models, however, have been
primarily developed and characterized with only male subjects.
Additionally, these models often assess reward and punishment
contingencies in separate tasks and constructs. In naturalistic
environments, appetitive and aversive contexts and outcomes are often
intertwined, and the ability to accurately assess and respond to these
conflicting situations is critical for optimal decision-making. Females
have been shown to respond differently than males to punishing stimuli (Denti & Epstein, 1972; Gruene, Flick, Stefano, Shea, & Shansky, 2015; Orsini, Willis, Gilbert, Bizon, & Setlow, 2016; Voulo & Parsons, 2017) as well as stress (Bangasser & Valentino, 2014; McEwen, 2014);
however, little is known about how sex differences translate to tasks
that involve both reward and punishment in the same behavioral series.
Here, we investigate sex differences in multiple rodent behavioral tasks
involving motivated behaviors (defined as behaviors where actions are
guided by action-outcome contingencies) that integrate reward-seeking
and punishment avoidance.
In the first task, the
Punishment Risk Task (PRT), a rewarded action was associated with an
escalating probability of punishment (Park & Moghaddam, 2017).
Thus, action-reward contingency was certain but different blocks in the
same behavioral series were associated with varying probability of
receiving a shock after action execution. This task assesses behavior in
response to unpredictability and perception of potential threats, which
is relevant to human models of anxiety (Cornwell, Garrido, Overstreet, Pine, & Grillon, 2017).
Human sex differences in prevalence and expression of anxiety-related
behaviors suggest that males and females may respond differently to
anxiety-provoking situations. This task, therefore, allowed us to
compare motivated actions in male and female rats within a context of
anxiety.
A second novel task, the Approach Avoid Task
(AAT) measured actions to seek reward or avoid punishment during the
same behavioral session. Rats were given simultaneous access to two
distinct actions (lever-press or nose-poke), and two discriminative
stimuli (a light or tone cue) signaled the trial type, either approach,
in which a specific action was reinforced with a pellet, or avoidance,
in which the other action prevented onset of a foot-shock. This task is
relevant to symptoms of brain disorders such as anxiety, substance
abuse, and MDD, which are associated with differences in processing of
rewarding and punishing contexts (Dombrovski, Szanto, Clark, Reynolds, & Siegle, 2013; McCabe, Woffindale, Harmer, & Cowen, 2012).
In addition to comparing learning and performance of male and female
rats in this task, we conducted two experiments to gauge the impact of
traditional models of anxiety in the context of this paradigm. These
included measuring (1) the dose-response effect of a pharmacological
model of anxiety (anxiogenic drug FG7142) on performance of the AAT and
(2) elevated plus maze (EPM) performance of animals that had undergone
training on the AAT compared to naïve animals.
Finally,
we characterized sex differences in reward-motivated tasks that required
behavioral inhibition and flexibility. Most disorders with higher
prevalence in men than women (autism, ADHD, schizophrenia) involve
impaired behavioral inhibition and flexibility. In addition, male
predisposition to compulsive behavior may contribute to the higher rates
of substance abuse and dependence in men [20]. To investigate these
constructs, we used two operant tests of cognitive flexibility: reversal
learning and extradimensional shifting. Both tasks required subjects to
update behavior in response to changing rules.
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