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Journal article

Meaningful silences: how dopamine listens to the ACh pause.

Abstract:
Mesostriatal dopaminergic neurons (DANs) and striatal cholinergic neurons (tonically active neurons, TANs) participate in signalling the behavioural or reward-related significance of stimuli in the environment. An antagonistic balance between dopamine (DA) and ACh is well known to regulate postsynaptic signal integration in the striatum. Recent findings have revealed additional presynaptic ACh-DA interactions of previously unappreciated sophistication. Striatal ACh acts presynaptically to polarize powerfully how opposing DAN activities are transduced into DA release. Furthermore, characteristic reward-related activities of TANs and DANs are temporally coincident but differently variant with reward probability. Reward-related DA signals could therefore be governed by the concomitant activity in TANs. This article discusses the dynamic implications for DA signalling when these phenomena act in concert. TAN pauses might powerfully enhance the contrast, or salience, of DA signals offered by reward-related bursts, and even by reward omission-related pauses, in DANs. Through such mechanisms, TAN-DAN interactions would be functionally cooperative.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1016/j.tins.2006.01.003

Authors

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Physiology Anatomy & Genetics
Role:
Author


Journal:
Trends in neurosciences More from this journal
Volume:
29
Issue:
3
Pages:
125-131
Publication date:
2006-03-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1878-108X
ISSN:
0166-2236


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:114138
UUID:
uuid:e88b1161-1aa2-4016-b831-0cbf5f07ca85
Local pid:
pubs:114138
Source identifiers:
114138
Deposit date:
2012-12-19
ARK identifier:

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