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Gating of dopamine transmission by calcium and axonal N‐, Q‐, T‐ and L‐type voltage‐gated calcium channels differs between striatal domains

112

Citations

57

References

2014

Year

Abstract

The axonal voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels (VGCCs) that catalyse dopamine (DA) transmission are incompletely defined. Yet, they are critical to DA function and might prime subpopulations of DA neurons for parkinsonian degeneration. Previous studies of VGCCs will have encompassed those on striatal cholinergic interneurons, which strongly influence DA transmission. We identify which VGCCs on DA axons govern DA transmission, we determine their dynamic properties and reveal an underlying basis for differences between the caudate putamen (CPu) and nucleus accumbens (NAc). We detected DA release evoked electrically during nicotinic receptor blockade or optogenetically by light activation of channel rhodopsin-expressing DA axons in mouse striatal slices. Subtype-specific VGCC blockers indicated that N-, Q-, T- and L-VGCCs govern DA release in CPu, but in NAc, T and L-channels are relatively silent. The roles of the most dominant channels were inversely frequency-dependent, due to low-pass filtering of DA release by Ca(2+)-dependent relationships between initial release probability and short-term plasticity. Ca(2+) concentration-response curves revealed that differences between CPu and NAc were due to greater underlying Ca(2+) sensitivity of DA transmission from CPu axons. Functions for 'silent' L- and T-channels in NAc could be unmasked by elevating extracellular [Ca(2+)]. Furthermore, we identified a greater coupling between BAPTA-sensitive, fast Ca(2+) transients and DA transmission in CPu axons, and evidence for endogenous fast buffering of Ca(2+) in NAc. These data reveal that a range of VGCCs operate dynamically on DA axons, depending on local driving forces. Furthermore, they reveal dramatic differences in Ca(2+) handling between axonal subpopulations that show different vulnerability to parkinsonian degeneration.

References

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