AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the link between glutamatergic dysfunction and hyper-dopaminergic states in schizophrenia, particularly focusing on the GluA1 AMPAR subunit.
  • Researchers used GluA1 knockout mice to investigate how impaired short-term memory and habituation affect dopamine responses in the brain's nucleus accumbens.
  • Findings revealed that while initial dopamine signals were normal, the knockout mice showed a failure to reduce dopamine responses with repeated stimuli, highlighting a potential mechanism behind psychosis and elevated dopamine levels in schizophrenia.

Article Abstract

Psychosis in disorders like schizophrenia is commonly associated with aberrant salience and elevated striatal dopamine. However, the underlying cause(s) of this hyper-dopaminergic state remain elusive. Various lines of evidence point to glutamatergic dysfunction and impairments in synaptic plasticity in the etiology of schizophrenia, including deficits associated with the GluA1 AMPAR subunit. GluA1 knockout (Gria1) mice provide a model of impaired synaptic plasticity in schizophrenia and exhibit a selective deficit in a form of short-term memory which underlies short-term habituation. As such, these mice are unable to reduce attention to recently presented stimuli. In this study we used fast-scan cyclic voltammetry to measure phasic dopamine responses in the nucleus accumbens of Gria1 mice to determine whether this behavioral phenotype might be a key driver of a hyper-dopaminergic state. There was no effect of GluA1 deletion on electrically-evoked dopamine responses in anaesthetized mice, demonstrating normal endogenous release properties of dopamine neurons in Gria1 mice. Furthermore, dopamine signals were initially similar in Gria1 mice compared to controls in response to both sucrose rewards and neutral light stimuli. They were also equally sensitive to changes in the magnitude of delivered rewards. In contrast, however, these stimulus-evoked dopamine signals failed to habituate with repeated presentations in Gria1 mice, resulting in a task-relevant, hyper-dopaminergic phenotype. Thus, here we show that GluA1 dysfunction, resulting in impaired short-term habituation, is a key driver of enhanced striatal dopamine responses, which may be an important contributor to aberrant salience and psychosis in psychiatric disorders like schizophrenia.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9908551PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41380-022-01861-8DOI Listing

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