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An axonal brake on striatal dopamine output by cholinergic interneurons

Output Details

Preprint June 20, 2024

Published March 13, 2025

Depolarization of axons is necessary for somatic action potentials to trigger axonal neurotransmitter release. Here we show that striatal cholinergic interneurons (ChIs) and nicotinic receptors (nAChRs) on mouse dopamine axons interrupt this relationship. After nAChR-mediated depolarization, dopamine release by subsequent depolarization events was suppressed for ~100 ms. This suppression was not due to depletion of dopamine or acetylcholine, but to a limited reactivation of dopamine axons after nAChR-mediated depolarization, and is more prominent in dorsal than in ventral striatum. In vivo, nAChRs predominantly depressed dopamine release, as nAChR antagonism in dorsal striatum elevated dopamine detected with optic-fiber photometry of dopamine sensor GRABDA2m and promoted conditioned place preference. Our findings reveal that ChIs acting via nAChRs transiently limit the reactivation of dopamine axons for subsequent action potentials in dopamine neurons and therefore generate a dynamic inverse scaling of dopamine release according to ChI activity.
Tags
  • Acetylcholine
  • Behavior/Behavioral studies
  • Dopamine
  • Fast-Cyclic Voltammetry
  • Mouse
  • Original Research
  • Striatum

Meet the Authors

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Yanfeng Zhang

    External Collaborator

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Pengwei Luan

    External Collaborator

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Qinbo Qiao

    External Collaborator

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Yiran He

    External Collaborator

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Peter Zatka-Haas

    External Collaborator

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Guofeng Zhang

    External Collaborator

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Michael Lin

    External Collaborator

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Armin Lak

    External Collaborator

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Miao Jing

    External Collaborator

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Edward O. Mann

    External Collaborator

  • Stephanie Cragg, PhD

    Lead PI (Core Leadership): Team Cragg

    University of Oxford

Aligning Science Across Parkinson's
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