Adaptor protein-3 produces synaptic vesicles that release phasic dopamine

Output Details

Preprint October 18, 2023

Published October 9, 2023

The burst firing of midbrain dopamine neurons releases a phasic dopamine signal that mediates reinforcement learning. At many synapses, however, high firing rates deplete synaptic vesicles (SVs), resulting in synaptic depression that limits release. What accounts for the increased release of dopamine by stimulation at high frequency? We find that adaptor protein-3 (AP-3) and its coat protein VPS41 promote axonal dopamine release by targeting vesicular monoamine transporter VMAT2 to the axon rather than dendrites. AP-3 and VPS41 also produce SVs that respond preferentially to high-frequency stimulation, independent of their role in axonal polarity. In addition, conditional inactivation of VPS41 in dopamine neurons impairs reinforcement learning, and this involves a defect in the frequency dependence of release rather than the amount of dopamine released. Thus, AP-3 and VPS41 promote the axonal polarity of dopamine release but enable learning by producing a distinct population of SVs tuned specifically to high firing frequency that confers the phasic release of dopamine.
Identifier (DOI)
10.1073/pnas.2309843120
Tags
  • Dopamine
  • Fluorescence imaging
  • Mouse
  • Neurobehavioral
  • Original Research
  • Primary culture
  • Synaptic vesicle exocytosis

Meet the Authors

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    Shweta Jain, PhD

    Key Personnel: Team Edwards

    University of California, San Francisco

  • Andrew Yee, PhD

    Key Personnel: Team Edwards

    University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus

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    James Maas

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Sarah Gierok

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Hongfei Xu

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Jasmine Stansil, BSc

    Key Personnel: Team Edwards

    University of California, San Francisco

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    Jacob Eriksen

  • Alexandra Nelson, MD, PhD

    Co-PI (Core Leadership): Team Edwards

    University of California, San Francisco

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    Katlin Silm

  • Chris Ford, PhD

    Collaborating PI: Team Edwards

    University of Colorado

  • Robert Edwards, MD

    Lead PI (Core Leadership): Team Edwards

    University of California, San Francisco