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Publication : Distinct roles of synaptic transmission in direct and indirect striatal pathways to reward and aversive behavior.

First Author  Hikida T Year  2010
Journal  Neuron Volume  66
Issue  6 Pages  896-907
PubMed ID  20620875 Mgi Jnum  J:167758
Mgi Id  MGI:4879081 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2010.05.011
Citation  Hikida T, et al. (2010) Distinct roles of synaptic transmission in direct and indirect striatal pathways to reward and aversive behavior. Neuron 66(6):896-907
abstractText  In the basal ganglia, convergent input and dopaminergic modulation of the direct striatonigral and the indirect striatopallidal pathways are critical in rewarding and aversive learning and drug addiction. To explore how the basal ganglia information is processed and integrated through these two pathways, we developed a reversible neurotransmission blocking technique, in which transmission of each pathway was selectively blocked by specific expression of transmission-blocking tetanus toxin in a doxycycline-dependent manner. The results indicated that the coordinated modulation of these two pathways was necessary for dopamine-mediated acute psychostimulant actions. This modulation, however, shifted to the predominant roles of the direct pathway in reward learning and cocaine sensitization and the indirect pathway in aversive behavior. These two pathways thus have distinct roles: the direct pathway critical for distinguishing associative rewarding stimuli from nonassociative ones and the indirect pathway for rapid memory formation to avoid aversive stimuli.
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