Dopamine transporter silencing in the rat: systems-level alterations in striato-cerebellar and prefrontal-midbrain circuits.
Jonathan R ReinwaldNatalia GassAnne S MallienAlexander SartoriusRobert BeckerMarkus SackClaudia Falfan-MelgozaChristian Clemm von HohenbergDamiana LeoNatascha PfeifferAnthonieke MiddelmanAndreas Meyer-LindenbergJudith Regina HombergWolfgang Weber-FahrPeter GassPublished in: Molecular psychiatry (2022)
Silencing of dopamine transporter (DAT), a main controlling factor of dopaminergic signaling, results in biochemical and behavioral features characteristic for neuropsychiatric diseases with presumed hyperdopaminergia including schizophrenia, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), bipolar disorder, and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Investigation of DAT silencing thus provides a transdiagnostic approach towards a systems-level understanding of common underlying pathways. Using a high-field multimodal imaging approach and a highly sensitive cryogenic coil, we integrated structural, functional and metabolic investigations in tandem with behavioral assessments on a newly developed preclinical rat model, comparing DAT homozygous knockout (DAT-KO, N = 14), heterozygous knockout (N = 8) and wild-type male rats (N = 14). We identified spatially distributed structural and functional brain alterations encompassing motor, limbic and associative loops that demonstrated strong behavioral relevance and were highly consistent across imaging modalities. DAT-KO rats manifested pronounced volume loss in the dorsal striatum, negatively correlating with cerebellar volume increase. These alterations were associated with hyperlocomotion, repetitive behavior and loss of efficient functional small-world organization. Further, prefrontal and midbrain regions manifested opposite changes in functional connectivity and local network topology. These prefrontal disturbances were corroborated by elevated myo-inositol levels and increased volume. To conclude, our imaging genetics approach provides multimodal evidence for prefrontal-midbrain decoupling and striato-cerebellar neuroplastic compensation as two key features of constitutive DAT blockade, proposing them as transdiagnostic mechanisms of hyperdopaminergia. Thus, our study connects developmental DAT blockade to systems-level brain changes, underlying impaired action inhibition control and resulting in motor hyperactivity and compulsive-like features relevant for ADHD, schizophrenia and OCD.
Keyphrases
- functional connectivity
- resting state
- attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
- obsessive compulsive disorder
- bipolar disorder
- working memory
- autism spectrum disorder
- high resolution
- wild type
- deep brain stimulation
- major depressive disorder
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- white matter
- pain management
- uric acid
- stem cells
- oxidative stress
- early onset
- chronic pain
- cell therapy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow