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1.
Dopamine (DA) is a key transmitter in motor, reward and cogitative pathways, with DA dysfunction implicated in disorders including Parkinson''s disease and addiction. Located in midbrain, DA neurons of the substantia nigra pars compacta project via the medial forebrain bundle to the dorsal striatum (caudate putamen), and DA neurons in the adjacent ventral tegmental area project to the ventral striatum (nucleus accumbens) and prefrontal cortex. In addition to classical vesicular release from axons, midbrain DA neurons exhibit DA release from their cell bodies and dendrites. Somatodendritic DA release leads to activation of D2 DA autoreceptors on DA neurons that inhibit their firing via G-protein-coupled inwardly rectifying K+ channels. This helps determine patterns of DA signalling at distant axonal release sites. Somatodendritically released DA also acts via volume transmission to extrasynaptic receptors that modulate local transmitter release and neuronal activity in the midbrain. Thus, somatodendritic release is a pivotal intrinsic feature of DA neurons that must be well defined in order to fully understand the physiology and pathophysiology of DA pathways. Here, we review recent mechanistic aspects of somatodendritic DA release, with particular emphasis on the Ca2+ dependence of release and the potential role of exocytotic proteins.  相似文献   

2.
A major output nucleus of the basal ganglia is the substantia nigra pars reticulata, which sends GABAergic projections to brainstem and thalamic nuclei. The GABAergic (GABA) neurons are reciprocally connected with nearby dopaminergic neurons, which project mainly to the basal ganglia, a set of subcortical nuclei critical for goal-directed behaviors. Here we examined the impact of motivational states on the activity of GABA neurons in the substantia nigra pars reticulata and the neighboring dopaminergic (DA) neurons in the pars compacta. Both types of neurons show short-latency bursts to a cue predicting a food reward. As mice became sated by repeated consumption of food pellets, one class of neurons reduced cue-elicited firing, whereas another class of neurons progressively increased firing. Extinction or pre-feeding just before the test session dramatically reduced the phasic responses and their motivational modulation. These results suggest that signals related to the current motivational state bidirectionally modulate behavior and the magnitude of phasic response of both DA and GABA neurons in the substantia nigra.  相似文献   

3.
J Zhang  L A Chiodo  A S Freeman 《Peptides》1991,12(2):339-343
Previous studies have shown that acute intravenous treatment with sulfated cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK-8S) but not unsulfated CCK-8 increases the number of spontaneously active midbrain dopamine (DA) neurons. This suggested that a peripheral-type (CCK-A) CCK receptor mediates this effect. Proglumide does not discriminate between CCK-A and CCK-B (central-type) receptors. In the present study, rats were treated acutely or repeatedly (14 days) with the selective CCK-A antagonist CR 1409. Repeated treatment with 5 mg/kg (IP) increased the number of spontaneously active DA cells in the A10 (ventral tegmental area) but not the A9 (substantia nigra zona compacta) region, which suggests that these DA populations are differentially affected by prolonged CCK-A receptor blockade. The sensitivity of impulse-regulating DA autoreceptors to the DA agonist quinpirole was not altered by CR 1409.  相似文献   

4.
The globus pallidus (GP) receives dopaminergic afferents from the pars compacta of substantia nigra and several studies suggested that dopamine exerts its action in the GP through presynaptic D2 receptors (D2Rs). However, the impact of dopamine in GP on the pallido-subthalamic and pallido-nigral neurotransmission is not known. Here, we investigated the role of dopamine, through activation of D2Rs, in the modulation of GP neuronal activity and its impact on the electrical activity of subthalamic nucleus (STN) and substantia nigra reticulata (SNr) neurons. Extracellular recordings combined with local intracerebral microinjection of drugs were done in male Sprague-Dawley rats under urethane anesthesia. We showed that dopamine, when injected locally, increased the firing rate of the majority of neurons in the GP. This increase of the firing rate was mimicked by quinpirole, a D2R agonist, and prevented by sulpiride, a D2R antagonist. In parallel, the injection of dopamine, as well as quinpirole, in the GP reduced the firing rate of majority of STN and SNr neurons. However, neither dopamine nor quinpirole changed the tonic discharge pattern of GP, STN and SNr neurons. Our results are the first to demonstrate that dopamine through activation of D2Rs located in the GP plays an important role in the modulation of GP-STN and GP-SNr neurotransmission and consequently controls STN and SNr neuronal firing. Moreover, we provide evidence that dopamine modulate the firing rate but not the pattern of GP neurons, which in turn control the firing rate, but not the pattern of STN and SNr neurons.  相似文献   

5.
The microinfusion of low doses of apomorphine into the striatum of anesthetized rats depressed the electrical activity of the neurons of the substantia nigra pars compacta while the infusion of bromocriptine had an excitatory or inhibitory effect. These data suggest that:1) the action of the two dopamine agonists on the striato-nigral pathway is different; 2) the striatum might contain dopaminergic receptors located on cells projecting to the substantia nigra with different roles in the feedback regulation of the latter; 3) the inhibitory action of systemically injected apomorphine is not simply due to a stimulation of dopamine “autoreceptors” but also to an action mediated by fibers descending from the striatum to the substantia nigra.  相似文献   

6.
Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) family members have been proposed as candidates for the treatment of Parkinson's disease because they protect nigral dopaminergic neurons against various types of insult. However, the efficiency of these factors depends on the availability of their receptors after damage. We evaluated the changes in the expression of c-Ret, GFRalpha1, and GFRalpha2 in the substantia nigra pars compacta in a rat model of Parkinson's disease by in situ hybridization. Intrastriatal injection of 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) transiently increased c-Ret and GFRalpha1 mRNA levels in the substantia nigra pars compacta at 1 day postlesion. At later time points, 3 and 6 days, the expression of c-Ret and GFRalpha1 was downregulated. GFRalpha2 expression was differentially regulated, as it decreased only 6 days after 6-OHDA injection. Triple-labeling studies, using in situ hybridization for the GDNF family receptors and immunohistochemistry for neuronal or glial cell markers, showed that changes in the expression of c-Ret, GFRalpha1, and GFRalpha2 in the substantia nigra pars compacta were localized to neurons. In conclusion, our results show that nigral neurons differentially regulate the expression of GDNF family receptors as a transient and compensatory response to 6-OHDA lesion.  相似文献   

7.
The dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra pars compacta and ventral tegmental area play a crucial role in regulating movement and cognition respectively. Several lines of evidence suggest that a degeneration of dopaminergic cells in the substantia nigra produces the symptoms of Parkinson's disease. On the other hand, a hyperactivity of the dopaminergic transmission in the brain induces dyskinesia, dystonia and psychosis. It is also well established that the euphoric and rewarding responses evoked by drugs of addiction, such as amphetamine and cocaine, are mediated by central dopamine systems. Electrophysiological experiments which study the activity of single dopaminergic neurons in the ventral mesencephalon have shown that dopamine and dopaminergic drugs reduce the firing frequency of these cells. This is due to the stimulation of D2-D3 autoreceptors and to a hyperpolarization of the membrane produced by an increase in potassium conductance. In addition, substances which increase the release (amphetamine), the synthesis (levodopa) or block the uptake (cocaine, nomifensine, amineptine) of dopamine in the brain inhibit the firing activity of the dopaminergic cells throughout dopamine-mediated mechanisms. In this review, we will briefly examine the literature concerning the physiological and behavioural responses caused by dopamine and dopaminergic agents on the dopaminergic neurons of the ventral mesencephalon. Our conclusion suggests that the electrophysiological actions of dopamine and dopamine-related drugs on dopaminergic cells in the ventral mesencephalon might be indicative of the pharmacological effects of these agents on the brain.  相似文献   

8.
G P Mereu  C Pacitti  A Argiolas 《Life sciences》1983,32(12):1383-1389
The effect of (-)-cathinone (CAT), an alkaloid from khat leaves, on brain dopamine (DA) metabolism and on the firing rate of nigral DA neurons was studied in rats, in comparison with that of d-amphetamine. Like d-amphetamine, CAT (8-40 mg/kg i.p.) decreased DOPAC levels in the caudate nucleus, nucleus accumbens and frontal cortex, without modifying DA concentrations. CAT showed approximately one fifth of the potency of d-amphetamine in this effect. CAT, injected i.v. to unanesthetized, paralyzed rats, inhibited the firing rate of DA neurons in the substantia nigra, pars compacta, showing a similar potency to that of d-amphetamine in this respect. CAT-induced inhibition of dopaminergic firing was reversed by haloperidol.  相似文献   

9.
Searching for new regulators of autophagy involved in selective dopaminergic (DA) neuron loss is a hallmark in the pathogenesis of Parkinson disease (PD). We here report that an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-associated transmembrane protein SLC35D3 is selectively expressed in subsets of midbrain DA neurons in about 10% TH (tyrosine hydroxylase)-positive neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) and in about 22% TH-positive neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA). Loss of SLC35D3 in ros (roswell mutant) mice showed a reduction of 11.9% DA neurons in the SNc and 15.5% DA neuron loss in the VTA with impaired autophagy. We determined that SLC35D3 enhanced the formation of the BECN1-ATG14-PIK3C3 complex to induce autophagy. These results suggest that SLC35D3 is a new regulator of tissue-specific autophagy and plays an important role in the increased autophagic activity required for the survival of subsets of DA neurons.  相似文献   

10.
Striatal delivery of dopamine (DA) by midbrain substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) neurons is vital for motor control and its depletion causes the motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease. While membrane potential changes or neuronal activity regulates tyrosine hydroxylase (TH, the rate limiting enzyme in catecholamine synthesis) expression in other catecholaminergic cells, it is not known whether the same occurs in adult SNc neurons. We administered drugs known to alter neuronal activity to mouse SNc DAergic neurons in various experimental preparations and measured changes in their TH expression. In cultured midbrain neurons, blockade of action potentials with 1?μM tetrodotoxin decreased TH expression beginning around 20?h later (as measured in real time by green fluorescent protein (GFP) expression driven off TH promoter activity). By contrast, partial blockade of small-conductance, Ca(2+) -activated potassium channels with 300?nM apamin increased TH mRNA and protein between 12 and 24?h later in slices of adult midbrain. Two-week infusions of 300?nM apamin directly to the adult mouse midbrain in vivo also increased TH expression in SNc neurons, measured immunohistochemically. Paradoxically, the number of TH immunoreactive (TH+) SNc neurons decreased in these animals. Similar in vivo infusions of drugs affecting other ion-channels and receptors (L-type voltage-activated Ca(2+) channels, GABA(A) receptors, high K(+) , DA receptors) also increased or decreased cellular TH immunoreactivity but decreased or increased, respectively, the number of TH+ cells in SNc. We conclude that in adult SNc neurons: (i) TH expression is activity-dependent and begins to change ~20?h following sustained changes in neuronal activity; (ii) ion-channels and receptors mediating cell-autonomous activity or synaptic input are equally potent in altering TH expression; and (iii) activity-dependent changes in TH expression are balanced by opposing changes in the number of TH+ SNc cells.  相似文献   

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