Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Cortical ChAT+ neurons co-transmit acetylcholine and GABA in a target- and brain-region-specific manner

166

Citations

59

References

2020

Year

Abstract

The mouse cerebral cortex contains neurons that express choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and are a potential local source of acetylcholine. However, the neurotransmitters released by cortical ChAT<sup>+</sup> neurons and their synaptic connectivity are unknown. We show that the nearly all cortical ChAT<sup>+</sup> neurons in mice are specialized VIP<sup>+</sup> interneurons that release GABA strongly onto other inhibitory interneurons and acetylcholine sparsely onto layer 1 interneurons and other VIP<sup>+</sup>/ChAT<sup>+</sup> interneurons. This differential transmission of ACh and GABA based on the postsynaptic target neuron is reflected in VIP<sup>+</sup>/ChAT<sup>+</sup> interneuron pre-synaptic terminals, as quantitative molecular analysis shows that only a subset of these are specialized to release acetylcholine. In addition, we identify a separate, sparse population of non-VIP ChAT<sup>+</sup> neurons in the medial prefrontal cortex with a distinct developmental origin that robustly release acetylcholine in layer 1. These results demonstrate both cortex-region heterogeneity in cortical ChAT<sup>+</sup> interneurons and target-specific co-release of acetylcholine and GABA.

References

YearCitations

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