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1.
Eur J Neurosci ; 58(12): 4466-4486, 2023 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36617434

ABSTRACT

Behavioural flexibility is key to survival in a dynamic environmentWhile flexible, goal-directed behaviours are initially dependent on dorsomedial striatum, they become dependent on lateral striatum as behaviours become inflexible. Similarly, lesions of dopamine terminals in lateral striatum disrupt the development of inflexible habits. This work suggests that dopamine release in lateral striatum may drive inflexible behaviours, though few studies have investigated a causative role of subpopulations of striatal dopamine terminals in reversal learning, a measure of flexibility. Here, we performed two optogenetic experiments to activate dopamine terminals in dorsomedial (DMS), dorsolateral (DLS) or ventral (nucleus accumbens [NAc]) striatum in DAT-Cre mice that expressed channelrhodopsin-2 via viral injection (Experiment I) or through transgenic breeding with an Ai32 reporter line (Experiment II) to determine how specific dopamine subpopulations impact reversal learning. Mice performed a reversal task in which they self-stimulated DMS, DLS, or NAc dopamine terminals by pressing one of two levers before action-outcome lever contingencies were reversed. Largely consistent with presumed ventromedial/lateral striatal function, we found that mice self-stimulating medial dopamine terminals reversed lever preference following contingency reversal, while mice self-stimulating NAc showed parial flexibility, and DLS self-stimulation resulted in impaired reversal. Impairments in DLS mice were characterized by more regressive errors and reliance on lose-stay strategies following reversal, as well as reduced within-session learning, suggesting reward insensitivity and overreliance on previously learned actions. This study supports a model of striatal function in which DMS and ventral dopamine facilitate goal-directed responding, and DLS dopamine supports more inflexible responding.


Subject(s)
Corpus Striatum , Dopamine , Mice , Animals , Corpus Striatum/physiology , Neostriatum , Reversal Learning/physiology , Nucleus Accumbens/physiology
2.
Behav Brain Res ; 434: 114023, 2022 09 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35901956

ABSTRACT

Habits are inflexible behaviors that persist despite changes in outcome value. While habits allow for efficient responding, neuropsychiatric diseases such as drug addiction and obsessive-compulsive disorder are characterized by overreliance on habits. Recently, the commercially popular drug cannabidiol (CBD) has emerged as a potential treatment for addictive behaviors, though it is not entirely clear how it exerts this therapeutic effect. As brain endocannabinoids play a key role in habit formation, we sought to determine how CBD modifies goal-directed behaviors and habit formation. To explore this, mice were administered CBD (20 mg/kg i.p.) or vehicle as a control and trained on random interval (RI30/60) or random ratio (RR10/20) schedules designed to elicit habitual or goal-directed lever pressing, respectively. Mice were tested for habitual responding using probe trials following reinforcer-specific devaluation as well as omission trials, where mice had to withhold responding to earn rewards. We found that while CBD had little effect on operant behaviors or reward devaluation, CBD inhibited goal-directed behavior in a sex-specific and context dependent manner during the omission task. Beyond drug treatment, we found an effect of sex throughout training, reward devaluation, and omission. This work provides evidence that CBD has no effect on habit formation in a reward devaluation paradigm. However, the omission results suggest that CBD may slow learning of novel action outcome contingencies or decrease goal-directed behavior. This work calls for further examination of sex-dependent outcomes of CBD treatment and highlights the importance of investigating sex effects in habit-related experiments.


Subject(s)
Cannabidiol , Conditioning, Operant , Animals , Female , Habits , Learning , Male , Mice , Reward
3.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 6289, 2021 11 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34725359

ABSTRACT

Newborns are colonized by maternal microbiota that is essential for offspring health and development. The composition of these pioneer communities exhibits individual differences, but the importance of this early-life heterogeneity to health outcomes is not understood. Here we validate a human microbiota-associated model in which fetal mice are cesarean delivered and gavaged with defined human vaginal microbial communities. This model replicates the inoculation that occurs during vaginal birth and reveals lasting effects on offspring metabolism, immunity, and the brain in a community-specific manner. This microbial effect is amplified by prior gestation in a maternal obesogenic or vaginal dysbiotic environment where placental and fetal ileum development are altered, and an augmented immune response increases rates of offspring mortality. Collectively, we describe a translationally relevant model to examine the defined role of specific human microbial communities on offspring health outcomes, and demonstrate that the prenatal environment dramatically shapes the postnatal response to inoculation.


Subject(s)
Gastrointestinal Microbiome , Maternal-Fetal Relations/physiology , Microbiota , Parturition/physiology , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/microbiology , Vagina/microbiology , Animals , Cesarean Section/methods , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Pregnancy , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/immunology , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/pathology , Transcriptome
4.
Curr Biol ; 31(23): 5350-5363.e5, 2021 12 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34637751

ABSTRACT

Dopamine has been suggested to encode cue-reward prediction errors during Pavlovian conditioning, signaling discrepancies between actual versus expected reward predicted by the cues.1-5 While this theory has been widely applied to reinforcement learning concerning instrumental actions, whether dopamine represents action-outcome prediction errors and how it controls sequential behavior remain largely unknown. The vast majority of previous studies examining dopamine responses primarily have used discrete reward-predictive stimuli,1-15 whether Pavlovian conditioned stimuli for which no action is required to earn reward or explicit discriminative stimuli that essentially instruct an animal how and when to respond for reward. Here, by training mice to perform optogenetic intracranial self-stimulation, we examined how self-initiated goal-directed behavior influences nigrostriatal dopamine transmission during single and sequential instrumental actions, in behavioral contexts with minimal overt changes in the animal's external environment. We found that dopamine release evoked by direct optogenetic stimulation was dramatically reduced when delivered as the consequence of the animal's own action, relative to non-contingent passive stimulation. This dopamine suppression generalized to food rewards was specific to the reinforced action, was temporally restricted to counteract the expected outcome, and exhibited sequence-selectivity consistent with hierarchical control of sequential behavior. These findings demonstrate that nigrostriatal dopamine signals sequence-specific prediction errors in action-outcome associations, with fundamental implications for reinforcement learning and instrumental behavior in health and disease.


Subject(s)
Dopamine , Reward , Animals , Conditioning, Classical/physiology , Cues , Dopamine/physiology , Mice , Reinforcement, Psychology
5.
Anim Microbiome ; 3(1): 37, 2021 May 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33975649

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: For more than 30 years, the tetracycline on/off system of inducible gene expression has been leveraged to study disease mechanisms across many research areas, especially that of metabolism and neuroscience. This system requires acute or chronic exposure to tetracycline derivatives, such as doxycycline, to manipulate gene expression in a temporal and tissue-specific manner, with exposure often being restricted to gestational and early developmental windows. Despite evidence showing that early life antibiotic exposure has adverse effects on gut microbiota, metabolism, physiology, immunity and behavior, little is known regarding the lasting impact of doxycycline treatment on relevant outcomes in experimental offspring. RESULTS: To examine the hypothesis that early life doxycycline exposure produces effects on offspring growth, behavior, and gut microbiota, we employed the most commonly used method for tetracycline on/off system by administering a low dose of doxycycline (0.5 mg/ml) in the drinking water to C57Bl/6J and C57BL/6J:129S1/SvImJ dams from embryonic day 15.5 to postnatal day 28. Developmental exposure to low dose doxycycline resulted in significant alterations to growth trajectories and body weight in both strains, which persisted beyond cessation of doxycycline exposure. Developmental doxycycline exposure influenced offspring bacterial community assembly in a temporal and sex-specific manner. Further, gut microbiota composition failed to recover by adulthood, suggesting a lasting imprint of developmental antibiotic exposure. CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrated that early life doxycycline exposure shifts the homeostatic baseline of prior exposed animals that may subsequently impact responses to experimental manipulations. These results highlight the gut microbiota as an important factor to consider in systems requiring methods of chronic antibiotic administration during pregnancy and critical periods of postnatal development.

6.
Microbiome ; 8(1): 15, 2020 02 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32046785

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Dietary effects on the gut microbiome play key roles in the pathophysiology of inflammatory disorders, metabolic syndrome, obesity, and behavioral dysregulation. Often overlooked in such studies is the consideration that experimental diets vary significantly in the proportion and source of their dietary fiber. Commonly, treatment comparisons are made between animals fed a purchased refined diet that lacks soluble fiber and animals fed a standard vivarium-provided chow diet that contains a rich source of soluble fiber. Despite the well-established critical role of soluble fiber as the source of short chain fatty acid production via the gut microbiome, the extent to which measured outcomes are driven by differences in dietary fiber is unclear. Further, the interaction between sex and age in response to dietary transition is likely important and should also be considered. RESULTS: We compared the impact of transitioning young adult and 1-year aged male and female mice from their standard chow diet to a refined low soluble fiber diet on gut microbiota community composition. Then, to determine the contribution of dietary fat, we also examined the impact of transitioning a subset of animals from refined low-fat to refined high-fat diet. We used a serial sampling strategy coupled with 16S rRNA marker gene sequencing to examine consequences of recurrent dietary switching on gut microbiota community dynamics. Analysis revealed that the transition from a chow diet to a refined diet that lacks soluble fiber accounted for most of the variance in community structure, diversity, and composition across all groups. This dietary transition was characterized by a loss of taxa within the phylum Bacteroidetes and expansion of Clostridia and Proteobacteria in a sex- and age-specific manner. Most notably, no changes to gut microbiota community structure and composition were observed between mice consuming either refined low- or high-fat diet, suggesting that transition to the refined diet that lacks soluble fiber is the primary driver of gut microbiota alterations, with limited additional impact of dietary fat on gut microbiota. CONCLUSION: Collectively, our results show that the choice of control diet has a significant impact on outcomes and interpretation related to diet effects on gut microbiota. As the reduction of soluble fiber may influence synthesis of microbial metabolites that are important for regulating metabolic, immune, behavioral, and neurobiological outcomes, additional studies are now needed to fully delineate the contribution of fat and fiber on the gut microbiome. Video Abtract.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/classification , Dietary Fats/administration & dosage , Dietary Fiber/administration & dosage , Gastrointestinal Microbiome , Age Factors , Animals , Bacteria/isolation & purification , Bacteria/metabolism , Bacteroidetes/classification , Diet, High-Fat , Feces , Female , Firmicutes/classification , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Proteobacteria/classification , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Sex Factors
7.
PLoS One ; 15(1): e0224715, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31914121

ABSTRACT

Habits are automated behaviors that are insensitive to changes in behavioral outcomes. Habitual responding is thought to be mediated by the striatum, with medial striatum guiding goal-directed action and lateral striatum promoting habits. However, interspersed throughout the striatum are neurochemically differing subcompartments known as patches, which are characterized by distinct molecular profiles relative to the surrounding matrix tissue. These structures have been thoroughly characterized neurochemically and anatomically, but little is known regarding their function. Patches have been shown to be selectively activated during inflexible motor stereotypies elicited by stimulants, suggesting that patches may subserve habitual behaviors. To explore this possibility, we utilized transgenic mice (Sepw1 NP67) preferentially expressing Cre recombinase in striatal patch neurons to target these neurons for ablation with a virus driving Cre-dependent expression of caspase 3. Mice were then trained to press a lever for sucrose rewards on a variable interval schedule to elicit habitual responding. Mice were not impaired on the acquisition of this task, but lesioning striatal patches disrupted behavioral stability across training, and lesioned mice utilized a more goal-directed behavioral strategy during training. Similarly, when mice were forced to omit responses to receive sucrose rewards, habitual responding was impaired in lesioned mice. To rule out effects of lesion on motor behaviors, mice were then tested for impairments in motor learning on a rotarod and locomotion in an open field. We found that patch lesions partially impaired initial performance on the rotarod without modifying locomotor behaviors in open field. This work indicates that patches promote behavioral stability and habitual responding, adding to a growing literature implicating striatal patches in stimulus-response behaviors.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Corpus Striatum/physiology , Neostriatum/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Animals , Caspase 3/genetics , Central Nervous System Stimulants/pharmacology , Dopamine/metabolism , Habits , Integrases/genetics , Locomotion/physiology , Male , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Motivation/genetics , Motivation/physiology , Selenoprotein W
8.
Anal Chem ; 90(22): 13434-13442, 2018 11 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30335966

ABSTRACT

Fast-scan cyclic voltammetry with a carbon-fiber microelectrode is an increasingly popular technique for in vivo measurements of electroactive neurotransmitters, most notably dopamine. Calibration of these electrodes is essential for many uses, but it is complicated by the many factors that affect an electrode's sensitivity when it is implanted in neural tissue. Experienced practitioners of fast-scan cyclic voltammetry are well aware that an electrode's sensitivity to dopamine depends on both the size and shape of the electrode's background waveform. In vitro electrode calibration is still the standard method, although a strategy for in situ calibration based on the size of the electrode's background waveform has previously been published. We reasoned that the accuracy and transferability of in situ calibration could be improved by using principal component regression to capture information contained in the shape of the background waveform. We use leave-one-out cross-validation to estimate the ability of this strategy to predict unknown electrodes and to compare its performance with that of the total-background-current strategy. The principal-component-regression strategy has significantly greater predictive performance than the total-background-current strategy, and the resulting calibration models can be transferred across independent laboratories. Importantly, multivariate quality-control statistics establish the applicability of the strategy to in vivo data. Adoption of the principal-component-regression strategy for in situ calibration will improve the interpretation of in vivo fast-scan cyclic voltammetry data.


Subject(s)
Electrochemical Techniques/methods , Principal Component Analysis , Animals , Brain/metabolism , Calibration , Carbon Fiber/chemistry , Data Accuracy , Dopamine/analysis , Electrochemical Techniques/instrumentation , Microelectrodes , Rats , Regression Analysis , Sensitivity and Specificity
9.
Nat Neurosci ; 21(8): 1061-1071, 2018 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29988069

ABSTRACT

Early prenatal stress disrupts maternal-to-offspring microbiota transmission and has lasting effects on metabolism, physiology, cognition, and behavior in male mice. Here we show that transplantation of maternal vaginal microbiota from stressed dams into naive pups delivered by cesarean section had effects that partly resembled those seen in prenatally stressed males. However, transplantation of control maternal vaginal microbiota into prenatally stressed pups delivered by cesarean section did not rescue the prenatal-stress phenotype. Prenatal stress was associated with alterations in the fetal intestinal transcriptome and niche, as well as with changes in the adult gut that were altered by additional stress exposure in adulthood. Further, maternal vaginal transfer also partially mediated the effects of prenatal stress on hypothalamic gene expression, as observed after chronic stress in adulthood. These findings suggest that the maternal vaginal microbiota contribute to the lasting effects of prenatal stress on gut and hypothalamus in male mice.


Subject(s)
Gastrointestinal Tract/physiology , Hypothalamus/physiology , Microbiota , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects , Stress, Psychological/physiopathology , Vagina/microbiology , Animals , Body Weight , Cesarean Section , Female , Gastrointestinal Tract/embryology , Gene Expression/genetics , Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System , Hypothalamus/metabolism , Intestinal Absorption , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Paraventricular Hypothalamic Nucleus/metabolism , Phenotype , Pregnancy , Transcriptome
10.
Sci Rep ; 7: 44182, 2017 03 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28266645

ABSTRACT

The microbiome is a regulator of host immunity, metabolism, neurodevelopment, and behavior. During early life, bacterial communities within maternal gut and vaginal compartments can have an impact on directing these processes. Maternal stress experience during pregnancy may impact offspring development by altering the temporal and spatial dynamics of the maternal microbiome during pregnancy. To examine the hypothesis that maternal stress disrupts gut and vaginal microbial dynamics during critical prenatal and postnatal windows, we used high-resolution 16S rRNA marker gene sequencing to examine outcomes in our mouse model of early prenatal stress. Consistent with predictions, maternal fecal communities shift across pregnancy, a process that is disrupted by stress. Vaginal bacterial community structure and composition exhibit lasting disruption following stress exposure. Comparison of maternal and offspring microbiota revealed that similarities in bacterial community composition was predicted by a complex interaction between maternal body niche and offspring age and sex. Importantly, early prenatal stress influenced offspring bacterial community assembly in a temporal and sex-specific manner. Taken together, our results demonstrate that early prenatal stress may influence offspring development through converging modifications to gut microbial composition during pregnancy and transmission of dysbiotic vaginal microbiome at birth.


Subject(s)
Microbiota , Pregnancy Complications/microbiology , Sex Characteristics , Stress, Psychological/microbiology , Animals , Female , Male , Mice , Pregnancy
11.
Neuron ; 93(6): 1436-1450.e8, 2017 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28285820

ABSTRACT

Dopamine is thought to play a critical role in reinforcement learning and goal-directed behavior, but its function in action selection remains largely unknown. Here we demonstrate that nigrostriatal dopamine biases ongoing action selection. When mice were trained to dynamically switch the action selected at different time points, changes in firing rate of nigrostriatal dopamine neurons, as well as dopamine signaling in the dorsal striatum, were found to be associated with action selection. This dopamine profile is specific to behavioral choice, scalable with interval duration, and doesn't reflect reward prediction error, timing, or value as single factors alone. Genetic deletion of NMDA receptors on dopamine or striatal neurons or optogenetic manipulation of dopamine concentration alters dopamine signaling and biases action selection. These results unveil a crucial role of nigrostriatal dopamine in integrating diverse information for regulating upcoming actions, and they have important implications for neurological disorders, including Parkinson's disease and substance dependence.


Subject(s)
Conditioning, Operant/physiology , Corpus Striatum/physiology , Dopamine/metabolism , Dopaminergic Neurons/physiology , Reward , Substantia Nigra/physiology , Animals , Female , Male , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Mice, Transgenic , Neural Pathways/physiology , Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate/genetics , Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate/physiology
12.
Neuron ; 91(5): 1069-1084, 2016 Sep 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27568516

ABSTRACT

The striatum contains neurochemically defined compartments termed patches and matrix. Previous studies suggest patches preferentially receive limbic inputs and project to dopamine neurons in substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc), whereas matrix neurons receive sensorimotor inputs and do not innervate SNc. Using BAC-Cre transgenic mice with viral tracing techniques, we mapped brain-wide differences in the input-output organization of the patch/matrix. Findings reveal a displaced population of striatal patch neurons termed "exo-patch," which reside in matrix zones but have neurochemistry, connectivity, and electrophysiological characteristics resembling patch neurons. Contrary to previous studies, results show patch/exo-patch and matrix neurons receive both limbic and sensorimotor information. A novel inhibitory projection from bed nucleus of the stria terminalis to patch/exo-patch neurons was revealed. Projections to SNc were found to originate from patch/exo-patch and matrix neurons. These findings redefine patch/matrix beyond traditional neurochemical topography and reveal new principles about their input-output connectivity, providing a foundation for future functional studies.


Subject(s)
Corpus Striatum/physiology , Limbic Lobe/physiology , Sensorimotor Cortex/physiology , Septal Nuclei/physiology , Animals , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Neural Pathways/physiology , Neuroanatomical Tract-Tracing Techniques , Neurons/physiology , Substantia Nigra/physiology
13.
Neuroreport ; 26(18): 1083-8, 2015 Dec 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26512933

ABSTRACT

Fetal alcohol spectrum disorders range in severity depending on the amount, timing, and frequency of alcohol exposure. Regardless of severity, sensorimotor defects are commonly reported. Sensorimotor information travels through three tracts of the internal capsule: thalamocortical axons, corticothalamic axons, and corticospinal axons. Here we describe the effects of binge ethanol exposure during the first-trimester equivalent on corticothalamic neurons using Swiss Webster mice. We injected pregnant mice with ethanol (2.9 g/kg, intraperitoneal, followed by 1.45 g/kg, intraperitoneal, 2 h later) on embryonic days (E) 11.5, 12.5, and 13.5. Our paradigm resulted in a mean maternal blood ethanol content of 294.8±15.4 mg/dl on E12.5 and 258.3±22.2 mg/dl on E13.5. Control dams were injected with an equivalent volume of PBS. Bromodeoxyuridine birthdating was carried out on E11.5 to label S-phase neurons. The days of injection were chosen because they are at the onset of neurogenesis and axon extension for corticothalamic, thalamocortical, and corticospinal neurons. Ethanol-exposed pups exhibited no differences compared with controls on day of birth in litter size, body weight, or brain weight. Corticothalamic neurons labeled with bromodeoxyuridine and T-box brain 1 were located in the deep layers of the cortex and did not differ in number in both groups. These results contrast several studies demonstrating alcohol-related differences in these parameters using chronic ethanol exposure paradigms and inbred mouse strains. Therefore, our findings highlight the importance of expanding the mouse strains used to model fetal alcohol spectrum disorder to enhance our understanding of its complex etiology.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Cortex/drug effects , Cerebral Cortex/embryology , Ethanol/toxicity , Neurogenesis/drug effects , Neurons/drug effects , Ventral Thalamic Nuclei/drug effects , Ventral Thalamic Nuclei/embryology , Animals , Cell Count , Ethanol/blood , Female , Mice , Neural Pathways/drug effects , Neural Pathways/embryology , Pregnancy
14.
Endocrinology ; 156(9): 3265-76, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26079804

ABSTRACT

The neonate is exposed to the maternal vaginal microbiota during parturition, providing the primary source for normal gut colonization, host immune maturation, and metabolism. These early interactions between the host and microbiota occur during a critical window of neurodevelopment, suggesting early life as an important period of cross talk between the developing gut and brain. Because perturbations in the prenatal environment such as maternal stress increase neurodevelopmental disease risk, disruptions to the vaginal ecosystem could be a contributing factor in significant and long-term consequences for the offspring. Therefore, to examine the hypothesis that changes in the vaginal microbiome are associated with effects on the offspring gut microbiota and on the developing brain, we used genomic, proteomic and metabolomic technologies to examine outcomes in our mouse model of early prenatal stress. Multivariate modeling identified broad proteomic changes to the maternal vaginal environment that influence offspring microbiota composition and metabolic processes essential for normal neurodevelopment. Maternal stress altered proteins related to vaginal immunity and abundance of Lactobacillus, the prominent taxa in the maternal vagina. Loss of maternal vaginal Lactobacillus resulted in decreased transmission of this bacterium to offspring. Further, altered microbiota composition in the neonate gut corresponded with changes in metabolite profiles involved in energy balance, and with region- and sex-specific disruptions of amino acid profiles in the developing brain. Taken together, these results identify the vaginal microbiota as a novel factor by which maternal stress may contribute to reprogramming of the developing brain that may predispose individuals to neurodevelopmental disorders.


Subject(s)
Brain/growth & development , Colon/microbiology , Pregnancy, Animal/psychology , Stress, Psychological/microbiology , Vagina/microbiology , Amino Acids/metabolism , Animals , Brain/metabolism , Female , Male , Mice, 129 Strain , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Microbiota , Pregnancy , Random Allocation , Sex Characteristics
15.
Neurotox Res ; 26(2): 152-67, 2014 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24562969

ABSTRACT

Phasic dopamine (DA) signaling, during which burst firing by DA neurons generates short-lived elevations in extracellular DA in terminal fields called DA transients, is implicated in reinforcement learning. Disrupted phasic DA signaling is proposed to link DA depletions and cognitive-behavioral impairment in methamphetamine (METH)-induced neurotoxicity. Here, we further investigated this disruption by assessing effects of METH pretreatment on DA transients elicited by a drug cocktail of raclopride, a D2 DA receptor antagonist, and nomifensine, an inhibitor of the dopamine transporter (DAT). One advantage of this approach is that pharmacological activation provides a large, high-quality data set of transients elicited by endogenous burst firing of DA neurons for analysis of regional differences and neurotoxicity. These pharmacologically evoked DA transients were measured in the dorsomedial (DM) and dorsolateral (DL) striatum of urethane-anesthetized rats by fast-scan cyclic voltammetry. Electrically evoked DA levels were also recorded to quantify DA release and uptake, and DAT binding was determined by means of autoradiography to index DA denervation. Pharmacologically evoked DA transients in intact animals exhibited a greater amplitude and frequency and shorter duration in the DM compared to the DL striatum, despite similar pre- and post-drug assessments of DA release and uptake in both sub-regions as determined from the electrically evoked DA signals. METH pretreatment reduced transient activity. The most prominent effect of METH pretreatment on transients across striatal sub-region was decreased amplitude, which mirrored decreased DAT binding and was accompanied by decreased DA release. Overall, these results identify marked intrastriatal differences in the activity of DA transients that appear independent of presynaptic mechanisms for DA release and uptake and further support disrupted phasic DA signaling mediated by decreased DA release in rats with METH-induced neurotoxicity.


Subject(s)
Central Nervous System Stimulants/toxicity , Corpus Striatum/drug effects , Corpus Striatum/physiopathology , Dopamine/metabolism , Methamphetamine/toxicity , Neurotoxicity Syndromes/physiopathology , Animals , Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Dopaminergic Neurons/drug effects , Dopaminergic Neurons/physiology , Male , Presynaptic Terminals/drug effects , Presynaptic Terminals/physiology , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Synaptic Transmission/drug effects , Synaptic Transmission/physiology
16.
Eur J Neurosci ; 38(1): 2078-88, 2013 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23574406

ABSTRACT

Methamphetamine (METH) is a highly addictive drug that is also neurotoxic to central dopamine (DA) systems. Although striatal DA depletions induced by METH are associated with behavioral and cognitive impairments, the link between these phenomena remains poorly understood. Previous work in both METH-pretreated animals and the 6-hydroxydopamine model of Parkinson's disease suggests that a disruption of phasic DA signaling, which is important for learning and goal-directed behavior, may be such a link. However, previous studies used electrical stimulation to elicit phasic-like DA responses and were also performed under anesthesia, which alters DA neuron activity and presynaptic function. Here we investigated the consequences of METH-induced DA terminal loss on both electrically evoked phasic-like DA signals and so-called 'spontaneous' phasic DA transients measured by voltammetry in awake rats. Not ostensibly attributable to discrete stimuli, these subsecond DA changes may play a role in enhancing reward-cue associations. METH pretreatment reduced tissue DA content in the dorsomedial striatum and nucleus accumbens by ~55%. Analysis of phasic-like DA responses elicited by reinforcing stimulation revealed that METH pretreatment decreased their amplitude and underlying mechanisms for release and uptake to a similar degree as DA content in both striatal subregions. Most importantly, characteristics of DA transients were altered by METH-induced DA terminal loss, with amplitude and frequency decreased and duration increased. These results demonstrate for the first time that denervation of DA neurons alters naturally occurring DA transients and are consistent with diminished phasic DA signaling as a plausible mechanism linking METH-induced striatal DA depletions and cognitive deficits.


Subject(s)
Dopamine Agents/toxicity , Dopamine/metabolism , Dopaminergic Neurons/drug effects , Methamphetamine/toxicity , Synaptic Transmission , Animals , Corpus Striatum/drug effects , Corpus Striatum/metabolism , Corpus Striatum/physiology , Dopaminergic Neurons/metabolism , Dopaminergic Neurons/physiology , Male , Nucleus Accumbens/drug effects , Nucleus Accumbens/metabolism , Nucleus Accumbens/physiology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
17.
J Neurochem ; 125(4): 555-65, 2013 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23480199

ABSTRACT

Methamphetamine-induced partial dopamine depletions are associated with impaired basal ganglia function, including decreased preprotachykinin mRNA expression and impaired transcriptional activation of activity-regulated, cytoskeleton-associated (Arc) gene in striatum. Recent work implicates deficits in phasic dopamine signaling as a potential mechanism linking methamphetamine-induced dopamine loss to impaired basal ganglia function. This study thus sought to establish a causal link between phasic dopamine transmission and altered basal ganglia function by determining whether the deficits in striatal neuron gene expression could be restored by increasing phasic dopamine release. Three weeks after pretreatment with saline or a neurotoxic regimen of methamphetamine, rats underwent phasic- or tonic-like stimulation of ascending dopamine neurons. Striatal gene expression was examined using in situ hybridization histochemistry. Phasic-like, but not tonic-like, stimulation induced immediate-early genes Arc and zif268 in both groups, despite the partial striatal dopamine denervation in methamphetamine-pretreated rats, with the Arc expression occurring in presumed striatonigral efferent neurons. Phasic-like stimulation also restored preprotachykinin mRNA expression. These results suggest that disruption of phasic dopamine signaling likely underlies methamphetamine-induced impairments in basal ganglia function, and that restoring phasic dopamine signaling may be a viable approach to manage long-term consequences of methamphetamine-induced dopamine loss on basal ganglia functions.


Subject(s)
Corpus Striatum/physiology , Dopamine/physiology , Dopaminergic Neurons/physiology , Medial Forebrain Bundle/physiology , Methamphetamine/toxicity , Neurotoxicity Syndromes/physiopathology , Amphetamine-Related Disorders/genetics , Amphetamine-Related Disorders/physiopathology , Animals , Central Nervous System Stimulants/toxicity , Corpus Striatum/drug effects , Cytoskeletal Proteins/genetics , Denervation/methods , Dopaminergic Neurons/drug effects , Early Growth Response Protein 1/genetics , Electric Stimulation/methods , Gene Expression/drug effects , Gene Expression/physiology , Genes, Immediate-Early/genetics , Male , Medial Forebrain Bundle/drug effects , Nerve Tissue Proteins/genetics , Neurotoxicity Syndromes/genetics , Protein Precursors/genetics , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Tachykinins/genetics
18.
J Neurochem ; 119(6): 1162-72, 2011 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21806614

ABSTRACT

High doses of amphetamine (AMPH) are thought to disrupt normal patterns of action potential-dependent dopaminergic neurotransmission by depleting vesicular stores of dopamine (DA) and inducing robust non-exocytotic DA release or efflux via dopamine transporter (DAT) reversal. However, these cardinal AMPH actions have been difficult to establish definitively in vivo. Here, we use fast-scan cyclic voltammetry (FSCV) in the urethane-anesthetized rat to evaluate the effects of 10 and 20 mg/kg AMPH on vesicular DA release and DAT function in dorsal and ventral striata. An equivalent high dose of cocaine (40 mg/kg) was also examined for comparison to psychostimulants acting preferentially by DAT inhibition. Parameters describing exocytotic DA release and neuronal DA uptake were determined from dynamic DA signals evoked by mild electrical stimulation previously established to be reinforcing. High-sensitivity FSCV with nanomolar detection was used to monitor changes in the background voltammetric signal as an index of DA efflux. Both doses of AMPH and cocaine markedly elevated evoked DA levels over the entire 2-h time course in the dorsal and ventral striatum. These increases were mediated by augmented vesicular DA release and diminished DA uptake typically acting concurrently. AMPH, but not cocaine, induced a slow, DA-like rise in some baseline recordings. However, this effect was highly variable in amplitude and duration, modest, and generally not present at all. These data thus describe a mechanistically similar activation of action potential-dependent dopaminergic neurotransmission by AMPH and cocaine in vivo. Moreover, DA efflux appears to be a unique, but secondary, AMPH action.


Subject(s)
Amphetamines/pharmacology , Anesthetics, Local/pharmacology , Central Nervous System Stimulants/pharmacology , Cocaine/pharmacology , Dopamine/metabolism , Exocytosis/drug effects , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Basal Ganglia/cytology , Basal Ganglia/drug effects , Biophysics , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Drug Synergism , Electric Stimulation/methods , Electrochemistry , Male , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
19.
J Neurochem ; 118(4): 668-76, 2011 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21668447

ABSTRACT

Neurotoxic doses of methamphetamine (METH) are known to cause depletions in striatal dopamine (DA) tissue content. However, the effects of METH-induced insults on dopaminergic neurotransmission are not fully understood. Here, we employed fast-scan cyclic voltammetry at a carbon-fiber microelectrode in the anesthetized rat striatum to assess the effects of a neurotoxic regimen of METH on phasic and tonic modes of dopaminergic signaling and underlying mechanisms of DA release and uptake. Extracellular DA was electrically evoked by stimulation of the medial forebrain bundle mimicking tonic and phasic firing patterns for dopaminergic cells and was monitored simultaneously in both the dorsomedial and dorsolateral striatum. Kinetic analysis of evoked recordings determined parameters describing DA release and uptake. Striatal DA tissue content was quantified by high performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection. METH-pretreatment (four doses of 7.5 or 10.0 mg/kg s.c.) induced DA depletions of ∼ 40% on average, which are reported in both striatal subregions. METH pre-treatment significantly decreased the amplitude of signals evoked by phasic, but not tonic, stimulation. Parameters for DA release and uptake were also similarly reduced by ∼ 40%, consistent with effects on evoked phasic-like responses and DA tissue content. Taken together, these results suggest that METH-pretreatment selectively diminishes phasic, but not tonic, dopaminergic signaling in the dorsal striatum.


Subject(s)
Central Nervous System Stimulants/toxicity , Corpus Striatum/physiopathology , Dopamine/physiology , Methamphetamine/toxicity , Neurotoxicity Syndromes/physiopathology , Signal Transduction/physiology , Algorithms , Animals , Dopamine/metabolism , Electric Stimulation , Electrophysiological Phenomena , Extracellular Space/metabolism , Kinetics , Male , Microelectrodes , Neurons/physiology , Oxidopamine , Parkinson Disease, Secondary/physiopathology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Sympathectomy, Chemical , Sympatholytics
20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21096069

ABSTRACT

This paper reports on a miniaturized device for wireless monitoring of extracellular dopamine levels in the brain of an ambulatory rat using fast-scan cyclic voltammetry at a carbon-fiber microelectrode. The device comprises integrated circuitry for neurochemical recording fabricated in 0.5-microm double-poly triple-metal CMOS technology, which is assembled and packaged on a miniature rigid-flex substrate together with a few external components for supply generation, biasing, and chip programming. The device operates from a single 3-V battery, weighs 2.3 g (including the battery), and upon implantation successfully captures the effects of the psychostimulant amphetamine on electrically and non-electrically evoked dopamine neurotransmission in the caudateputamen region of an ambulatory rat's forebrain.


Subject(s)
Dopamine/analysis , Electrochemical Techniques/instrumentation , Miniaturization/instrumentation , Monitoring, Ambulatory/instrumentation , Wireless Technology/instrumentation , Amphetamine/pharmacology , Animals , Male , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
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