Publications by authors named "Stephanie J Cragg"

Article Synopsis
  • Astrocytes play crucial and underestimated roles in modulating neuronal circuits, particularly in the striatum, where they regulate dopamine transmission and interact closely with cholinergic interneurons (ChIs).
  • The study reveals that striatal astrocytes rapidly excite ChIs and influence dopamine release through nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, operating on very fast timescales.
  • A unique anatomical configuration is observed, where ChI somata are closely located to astrocyte somata, allowing for a dynamic interaction that regulates ChI excitability and extracellular calcium, thus impacting overall striatal circuit activity and dopamine signaling.
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Dopaminergic receptor antagonism is a crucial component of all licensed treatments for psychosis, and dopamine dysfunction has been central to pathophysiological models of psychotic symptoms. Some clinical trials, however, indicate that drugs that act through muscarinic receptor agonism can also be effective in treating psychosis, potentially implicating muscarinic abnormalities in the pathophysiology of psychosis. Here, we discuss understanding of the central muscarinic system, and we examine preclinical, behavioural, post-mortem, and neuroimaging evidence for its involvement in psychosis.

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Fiber photometry is a key technique for characterizing brain-behavior relationships in vivo. Initially, it was primarily used to report calcium dynamics as a proxy for neural activity via genetically encoded indicators. This generated new insights into brain functions including movement, memory, and motivation at the level of defined circuits and cell types.

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  • The study investigates how L-type voltage-gated calcium channels (LTCCs) influence dopamine (DA) release and neuron activity, particularly in relation to Parkinson's disease vulnerability.
  • It finds that LTCC function varies significantly between different types of dopamine neurons and is influenced by local biological factors such as sex and specific proteins related to Parkinson's risk.
  • The research reveals that factors promoting LTCC activity are linked to increased Parkinsonian risk, while protective factors can inhibit LTCC function, suggesting a complex interaction that may affect the survival of DA neurons in Parkinson's disease.
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Oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) receive synaptic innervation from glutamatergic and GABAergic axons and can be dynamically regulated by neural activity, resulting in activity-dependent changes in patterns of axon myelination. However, it remains unclear to what extent other types of neurons may innervate OPCs. Here, we provide evidence implicating midbrain dopamine neurons in the innervation of oligodendrocyte lineage cells in the anterior corpus callosum and nearby white matter tracts of male and female adult mice.

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Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) α6 subunit RNA expression is relatively restricted to midbrain regions and is located presynaptically on dopaminergic neurons projecting to the striatum. This subunit modulates dopamine neurotransmission and may have therapeutic potential in movement disorders. We aimed to develop potent and selective α6-containing nAChR antagonists to explore modulation of dopamine release and regulation of motor function in vivo.

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Parkinson's disease is the second most common neurodegenerative disease and yet the early pathophysiological events of the condition and sequences of dysfunction remain unclear. The loss of dopaminergic neurons and reduced levels of striatal dopamine are descriptions used interchangeably as underlying the motor deficits in Parkinson's disease. However, decades of research suggest that dopamine release deficits in Parkinson's disease do not occur only after cell death, but that there is dysfunction or dysregulation of axonal dopamine release before cell loss.

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  • The mTOR pathway is crucial for regulating cell growth and metabolism, especially in midbrain dopamine neurons which are sensitive to its signaling.
  • This research explores the roles of two mTOR complexes, mTORC1 and mTORC2, in dopamine neurons by creating mice with specific deletions for components of each complex.
  • The study finds that blocking mTORC1 significantly disrupts dopamine neuron structure and function, while mTORC2 has subtler effects; however, impairing both leads to major issues in dopamine release, highlighting the need for balanced mTOR signaling for proper dopaminergic function.
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Article Synopsis
  • Striatal adenosine A receptors (ARs) can inhibit dopamine release, with their activity being regulated by astrocytic equilibrative nucleoside transporter 1 (ENT1), which is sensitive to ethanol.
  • In experiments with striatal slices from mice, activating ARs diminished dopamine release, especially at lower stimulation rates, while blocking ARs heightened dopamine release levels, indicating a fundamental tonic inhibition.
  • The study found that inhibiting ENT1 increased adenosine levels, further enhancing AR-mediated inhibition, while ethanol reduced adenosine uptake through ENT1, thus promoting dopamine output dynamics and highlighting the complex role of astrocytes in regulating striatal function under the influence of ethanol.
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Striatal dopamine transporters (DAT) powerfully regulate dopamine signaling, and can contribute risk to degeneration in Parkinson's disease (PD). DATs can interact with the neuronal protein α-synuclein, which is associated with the etiology and molecular pathology of idiopathic and familial PD. Here, we tested whether DAT function in governing dopamine (DA) uptake and release is modified in a human-α-synuclein-overexpressing (-OVX) transgenic mouse model of early PD.

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Striatal dopamine and acetylcholine are thought to be imbalanced in Parkinson's disease. In this issue of Neuron, Cai et al. report that restoration of nigral glutamate co-transmission, acting on dorsolateral striatal cholinergic interneuron mGluR1s, can rescue motor dysfunction in a mouse model of Parkinson's.

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Article Synopsis
  • * GABA acts on DA axons through GABA receptors, affecting both the strength of DA release and its short-term plasticity, with specific sources of GABA contributing to this modulation identified.
  • * The interaction between GABA and DA signaling might play a key role in psychomotor disorders like Parkinson's disease, suggesting potential new drug targets to regulate DA output.
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Article Synopsis
  • Striatal dopamine (DA) is essential for regulating action and learning, with recent findings indicating that its release is inhibited by GABA in the striatum.
  • The role of plasma membrane GABA uptake transporters (GATs), particularly GAT-1 and GAT-3 located on astrocytes and neurons, in influencing DA output has emerged as a key focus of the research.
  • In a mouse model of early parkinsonism, reduced GAT levels lead to increased inhibition of DA release and highlight maladaptive changes affecting DA output in critical regions of the striatum.
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Background: Numerous studies indicate an association between neurodegenerative and metabolic diseases. Although still a matter of debate, growing evidence from epidemiological and animal studies indicate that preexisting diabetes increases the risk to develop Parkinson's disease. However, the mechanisms of such an association are unknown.

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  • Parkinson's disease (PD) is linked to the loss of dopamine neurons and the buildup of α-synuclein, with impaired autophagy being a key concern.
  • Researchers created a mouse model with impaired macroautophagy in dopamine neurons to investigate its effects on α-synuclein and neuron health.
  • Surprisingly, while impaired macroautophagy worsens neuronal damage, it also increases dopamine neurotransmission, leading to improved motor function despite the ongoing pathology, hinting at complex interactions that could inform future PD treatments targeting autophagy.
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Article Synopsis
  • Mesostriatal dopaminergic neurons have complex branching structures, which influence how action potentials relate to dopamine release in the striatum, a process that’s not yet fully understood.
  • This study examines how axonal activity and release probability affect short-term dopamine release using advanced techniques on mouse brain tissue.
  • Findings reveal that short-term plasticity in dopamine release is mainly controlled by axonal properties, particularly the dopamine transporter, rather than the initial amount of dopamine released, with distinct behaviors observed in different areas of the dorsal striatum.
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The calcium-binding protein calbindin-D28K, or calb1, is expressed at higher levels by dopamine (DA) neurons originating in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) than in the adjacent substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). Calb1 has received attention for a potential role in neuroprotection in Parkinson's disease. The underlying physiological roles for calb1 are incompletely understood.

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Article Synopsis
  • Nigrostriatal dopamine (DA) plays an essential role in action selection and learning, and its release is influenced by various striatal neurotransmitters, primarily GABA and cholinergic interneurons (ChIs).
  • Research indicates that GABA can directly inhibit DA release in the striatum through GABA receptors, independent of ChI activity, as demonstrated through experiments with male mice striatal slices.
  • Findings suggest that GABA and its receptors provide tonic inhibition of DA release, indicating a significant regulatory role for striatal GABA in dopamine signaling.
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Striatal dopamine (DA) is a major player in action selection and reinforcement. DA release is under strong local control by striatal ACh acting at axonal nicotinic ACh receptors (nAChRs) on DA axons. Striatal nAChRs have been shown to control how DA is released in response to ascending activity from DA neurons, and they also directly drive DA release following synchronized activity in a small local cholinergic network.

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Cholinergic interneurons (ChIs) of the striatum pause their firing in response to salient stimuli and conditioned stimuli after learning. Several different mechanisms for pause generation have been proposed, but a unifying basis has not previously emerged. Here, using in vivo and ex vivo recordings in rat and mouse brain and a computational model, we show that ChI pauses are driven by withdrawal of excitatory inputs to striatum and result from a delayed rectifier potassium current (I) in concert with local neuromodulation.

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Striatal cholinergic interneurons, the so-called tonically active neurons (TANs), pause their firing in response to sensory cues and rewards during classical conditioning and instrumental tasks. The respective pause responses observed can demonstrate many commonalities, such as constant latency and duration, synchronous occurrence in a population of cells, and coincidence with phasic activities of midbrain dopamine neurons (DANs) that signal reward predictions and errors. Pauses can however also show divergent properties.

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The striatum is a heterogeneous structure with a diverse range of neuron types and neuromodulators. Three decades of anatomical and biochemical studies have established that the neurochemical organization of striatum is not uniformly heterogeneous, but rather, can be differentiated into neurochemically discrete compartments known as striosomes (also known as patches) and matrix. These compartments are well understood to differ in their expression of neurochemical markers, with some differences in afferent and efferent connectivity and have also been suggested to have different involvement in a range of neurological diseases.

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Corticostriatal regulation of striatal dopamine (DA) transmission has long been postulated, but ionotropic glutamate receptors have not been localized directly to DA axons. Striatal cholinergic interneurons (ChIs) are emerging as major players in striatal function, and can govern DA transmission by activating nicotinic receptors (nAChRs) on DA axons. Cortical inputs to ChIs have historically been perceived as sparse, but recent evidence indicates that they strongly activate ChIs.

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Dopamine (DA) transmission is governed by processes that regulate release from axonal boutons in the forebrain and the somatodendritic compartment in midbrain, and by clearance by the DA transporter, diffusion, and extracellular metabolism. We review how axonal DA release is regulated by neuronal activity and by autoreceptors and heteroreceptors, and address how quantal release events are regulated in size and frequency. In brain regions densely innervated by DA axons, DA clearance is due predominantly to uptake by the DA transporter, whereas in cortex, midbrain, and other regions with relatively sparse DA inputs, the norepinephrine transporter and diffusion are involved.

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Midbrain dopaminergic neurons are essential for appropriate voluntary movement, as epitomized by the cardinal motor impairments arising in Parkinson's disease. Understanding the basis of such motor control requires understanding how the firing of different types of dopaminergic neuron relates to movement and how this activity is deciphered in target structures such as the striatum. By recording and labeling individual neurons in behaving mice, we show that the representation of brief spontaneous movements in the firing of identified midbrain dopaminergic neurons is cell-type selective.

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