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Excessive firing of dyskinesia-associated striatal direct pathway neurons is gated by dopamine and excitatory synaptic input

Output Details

Published July 17, 2024

The striatum integrates dopaminergic and glutamatergic inputs to select preferred versus alternative actions. However, the precise mechanisms underlying this process remain unclear. One way to study action selection is to understand how it breaks down in pathological states. Here, we explored the cellular and synaptic mechanisms of levodopa-induced dyskinesia (LID), a complication of Parkinson’s disease therapy characterized by involuntary movements. We used an activity-dependent tool (FosTRAP) in conjunction with a mouse model of LID to investigate functionally distinct subsets of striatal direct pathway medium spiny neurons (dMSNs). In vivo, levodopa differentially activates dyskinesia-associated (TRAPed) dMSNs compared to other dMSNs. We found this differential activation of TRAPed dMSNs is likely to be driven by higher dopamine receptor expression, dopamine-dependent excitability, and excitatory input from the motor cortex and thalamus. Together, these findings suggest how the intrinsic and synaptic properties of heterogeneous dMSN subpopulations integrate to support action selection.
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  • Original Research

Meet the Authors

  • Tom Hnasko, PhD

    Co-PI (Core Leadership): Team Awatramani

    University of California, San Diego

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    michael ryan

    External Collaborator

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    Allison Girasole

    External Collaborator

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    Andrew Flores

    External Collaborator

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    Emily Twedell, BA

    Key Personnel: Team Edwards

    University of California, San Francisco

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    Match McGregor, PhD

    Key Personnel: Team Edwards

    University of Colorado Denver

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    Rea Brakaj

    External Collaborator

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    Ronald Paletzki

    External Collaborator

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    Charles Gerfen

    External Collaborator

  • Alexandra Nelson, MD, PhD

    Co-PI (Core Leadership): Team Edwards

    University of California, San Francisco

Aligning Science Across Parkinson's
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