Literature DB >> 23486949

Selective effects of dopamine depletion and L-DOPA therapy on learning-related firing dynamics of striatal neurons.

Ledia F Hernandez1, Yasuo Kubota, Dan Hu, Mark W Howe, Nuné Lemaire, Ann M Graybiel.   

Abstract

Despite evidence that dopamine neurotransmission in the striatum is critical for learning as well as for movement control, little is yet known about how the learning-related dynamics of striatal activity are affected by dopamine depletion, a condition faced in Parkinson's disease. We made localized intrastriatal 6-hydroxydopamine lesions in rats and recorded within the dopamine-depleted sensorimotor striatal zone and its contralateral correspondent as the animals learned a conditional maze task. Rather than producing global, nonspecific elevations in firing rate across the task, the dopamine depletion altered striatal projection neuron activity and fast-spiking interneuron activity selectively, with sharply task-specific and cell type-specific effects, and often, with learning-stage selective effects as well. Striatal projection neurons with strong responses during the maze runs had especially elevated responsiveness during the maze runs. Projection neurons that, instead, fired most strongly before maze running showed elevated pre-start firing rates, but not during maze running, as learning progressed. The intrastriatal dopamine depletion severely affected the learning-related patterning of fast-spiking interneuron ensembles, especially during maze running and after extended training. Remarkably, L-DOPA treatment almost entirely reversed the depletion-induced elevations in pre-run firing of the projection neurons, and elevated their responses around start and end of maze runs. By contrast, L-DOPA failed to normalize fast-spiking interneuron activity. Thus the effects of striatal dopamine depletion and restoration on striatal activity are highly dependent not only on cell type, as previously shown, but also on the behavioral activity called for and the state of behavioral learning achieved.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23486949      PMCID: PMC3655722          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3746-12.2013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  43 in total

1.  Activity of striatal neurons reflects dynamic encoding and recoding of procedural memories.

Authors:  Terra D Barnes; Yasuo Kubota; Dan Hu; Dezhe Z Jin; Ann M Graybiel
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2005-10-20       Impact factor: 49.962

Review 2.  Spontaneous firing and evoked pauses in the tonically active cholinergic interneurons of the striatum.

Authors:  J A Goldberg; J N J Reynolds
Journal:  Neuroscience       Date:  2011-09-08       Impact factor: 3.590

3.  Cortically driven immediate-early gene expression reflects modular influence of sensorimotor cortex on identified striatal neurons in the squirrel monkey.

Authors:  H B Parthasarathy; A M Graybiel
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  1997-04-01       Impact factor: 6.167

4.  Lesion to the nigrostriatal dopamine system disrupts stimulus-response habit formation.

Authors:  Alexis Faure; Ulrike Haberland; Françoise Condé; Nicole El Massioui
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2005-03-16       Impact factor: 6.167

5.  Differential dynamics of activity changes in dorsolateral and dorsomedial striatal loops during learning.

Authors:  Catherine A Thorn; Hisham Atallah; Mark Howe; Ann M Graybiel
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2010-06-10       Impact factor: 17.173

6.  Responses of tonically active neurons in the primate's striatum undergo systematic changes during behavioral sensorimotor conditioning.

Authors:  T Aosaki; H Tsubokawa; A Ishida; K Watanabe; A M Graybiel; M Kimura
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  1994-06       Impact factor: 6.167

7.  Striatal dopamine release is triggered by synchronized activity in cholinergic interneurons.

Authors:  Sarah Threlfell; Tatjana Lalic; Nicola J Platt; Katie A Jennings; Karl Deisseroth; Stephanie J Cragg
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2012-07-12       Impact factor: 17.173

8.  Start/stop signals emerge in nigrostriatal circuits during sequence learning.

Authors:  Xin Jin; Rui M Costa
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2010-07-22       Impact factor: 49.962

Review 9.  Multiple dopamine functions at different time courses.

Authors:  Wolfram Schultz
Journal:  Annu Rev Neurosci       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 12.449

10.  Chronic microsensors for longitudinal, subsecond dopamine detection in behaving animals.

Authors:  Jeremy J Clark; Stefan G Sandberg; Matthew J Wanat; Jerylin O Gan; Eric A Horne; Andrew S Hart; Christina A Akers; Jones G Parker; Ingo Willuhn; Vicente Martinez; Scott B Evans; Nephi Stella; Paul E M Phillips
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2009-12-27       Impact factor: 28.547

View more
  17 in total

Review 1.  The striatum: where skills and habits meet.

Authors:  Ann M Graybiel; Scott T Grafton
Journal:  Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol       Date:  2015-08-03       Impact factor: 10.005

Review 2.  Dopaminergic modulation of striatal function and Parkinson's disease.

Authors:  Shenyu Zhai; Weixing Shen; Steven M Graves; D James Surmeier
Journal:  J Neural Transm (Vienna)       Date:  2019-04-01       Impact factor: 3.575

3.  Lithium prevents parkinsonian behavioral and striatal phenotypes in an aged parkin mutant transgenic mouse model.

Authors:  Christopher A Lieu; Colleen M Dewey; Shankar J Chinta; Anand Rane; Subramanian Rajagopalan; Sean Batir; Yong-Hwan Kim; Julie K Andersen
Journal:  Brain Res       Date:  2014-10-27       Impact factor: 3.252

4.  Inversely Active Striatal Projection Neurons and Interneurons Selectively Delimit Useful Behavioral Sequences.

Authors:  Nuné Martiros; Alexandra A Burgess; Ann M Graybiel
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2018-02-08       Impact factor: 10.834

Review 5.  Neural substrates of habit.

Authors:  Melissa Malvaez
Journal:  J Neurosci Res       Date:  2019-11-06       Impact factor: 4.164

Review 6.  Striatal synapses, circuits, and Parkinson's disease.

Authors:  Shenyu Zhai; Asami Tanimura; Steven M Graves; Weixing Shen; D James Surmeier
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurobiol       Date:  2017-08-24       Impact factor: 6.627

7.  Cyclic AMP-producing chemogenetic activation of indirect pathway striatal projection neurons and the downstream effects on the globus pallidus and subthalamic nucleus in freely moving mice.

Authors:  Safa Bouabid; Fu-Ming Zhou
Journal:  J Neurochem       Date:  2018-04-22       Impact factor: 5.372

8.  Pallidostriatal Projections Promote β Oscillations in a Dopamine-Depleted Biophysical Network Model.

Authors:  Victoria L Corbit; Timothy C Whalen; Kevin T Zitelli; Stephanie Y Crilly; Jonathan E Rubin; Aryn H Gittis
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2016-05-18       Impact factor: 6.167

Review 9.  Aberrant features of in vivo striatal dynamics in Parkinson's disease.

Authors:  Kwang Lee; Sotiris C Masmanidis
Journal:  J Neurosci Res       Date:  2019-09-09       Impact factor: 4.164

10.  Axial levodopa-induced dyskinesias and neuronal activity in the dorsal striatum.

Authors:  Stephanie L Alberico; Young-Cho Kim; Tomas Lence; Nandakumar S Narayanan
Journal:  Neuroscience       Date:  2016-12-09       Impact factor: 3.590

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.