|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Nicotinic and opioid receptor regulation of striatal dopamine D2-receptor mediated transmission.

First Author  Mamaligas AA Year  2016
Journal  Sci Rep Volume  6
Pages  37834 PubMed ID  27886263
Mgi Jnum  J:259929 Mgi Id  MGI:6102076
Doi  10.1038/srep37834 Citation  Mamaligas AA, et al. (2016) Nicotinic and opioid receptor regulation of striatal dopamine D2-receptor mediated transmission. Sci Rep 6:37834
abstractText  In addition to dopamine neuron firing, cholinergic interneurons (ChIs) regulate dopamine release in the striatum via presynaptic nicotinic receptors (nAChRs) on dopamine axon terminals. Synchronous activity of ChIs is necessary to evoke dopamine release through this pathway. The frequency-dependence of disynaptic nicotinic modulation has led to the hypothesis that nAChRs act as a high-pass filter in the dopaminergic microcircuit. Here, we used optogenetics to selectively stimulate either ChIs or dopamine terminals directly in the striatum. To measure the functional consequence of dopamine release, D2-receptor synaptic activity was assessed via virally overexpressed potassium channels (GIRK2) in medium spiny neurons (MSNs). We found that nicotinic-mediated dopamine release was blunted at higher frequencies because nAChRs exhibit prolonged desensitization after a single pulse of synchronous ChI activity. However, when dopamine neurons alone were stimulated, nAChRs had no effect at any frequency. We further assessed how opioid receptors modulate these two mechanisms of release. Bath application of the kappa opioid receptor agonist U69593 decreased D2-receptor activation through both pathways, whereas the mu opioid receptor agonist DAMGO decreased D2-receptor activity only as a result of cholinergic-mediated dopamine release. Thus the release of dopamine can be independently modulated when driven by either dopamine neurons or cholinergic interneurons.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

3 Authors

6 Bio Entities

0 Expression