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Genetic Variation in the Dopamine System is Associated with Mixed-Strategy Decision-Making in Parkinson's Patients.

Ashley C ParrHeidi C RiekBrian C CoeGiovanna PariMario MasellisConnie MarrasDouglas P Munoz
Published in: The European journal of neuroscience (2022)
Decision-making during mixed-strategy games requires flexibly adapting choice strategies in response to others' actions and dynamically tracking outcomes. Such decisions involve diverse cognitive processes, including reinforcement learning, which are affected by disruptions to the striatal dopamine system. We therefore investigated how genetic variation in dopamine function affected mixed-strategy decision-making in Parkinson's disease (PD), which involves striatal dopamine pathology. Sixty-six PD patients (ages: 49-85, Hoehn & Yahr Stage 1-3) and twenty-two healthy controls (ages: 54-75) competed in a mixed-strategy game where successful performance depended on minimizing choice biases (i.e., flexibly adapting choices trial-by-trial). Participants also completed a fixed-strategy task that was matched for sensory input, motor outputs, and overall reward rate. Factor analyses were used to disentangle cognitive from motor aspects within both tasks. Using a within-subject, multi-center design, patients were examined on and off dopaminergic therapy, and genetic variation was examined via a multilocus genetic profile score representing the additive effects of three single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that influence dopamine transmission: rs4680 (COMT Val 158 Met), rs6277 (C957T), and rs907094 (encoding DARPP-32). PD and control participants displayed comparable mixed-strategy choice behavior (overall), however, PD patients with genetic profile scores indicating higher dopamine transmission showed improved performance relative to those with low scores. Exploratory follow-up tests across individual SNPs revealed better performance in individuals with the C957T polymorphism, reflecting higher striatal D2/D3 receptor density. Importantly, genetic variation modulated cognitive aspects of performance, above and beyond motor function, suggesting that genetic variation in dopamine signaling may underlie individual differences in cognitive function in PD.
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