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Chronic Nicotine Mitigates Aberrant Inhibitory Motor Learning Induced by Motor Experience under Dopamine Deficiency.

Jessica L KorandaAnne C KrokJian XuAnis ContractorDaniel S McGeheeJeff A BeelerXiaoxi Zhuang
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
Increasingly, aberrant plasticity and aberrant learning are recognized as contributing to the development and progression of movement disorders. Here, we show that chronic nicotine (cNIC) treatment or specific deletion of β2 nicotinic receptor subunits in dopamine neurons mitigates aberrant motor learning induced by dopamine D2 receptor (D2R) blockade in mice. Moreover, both manipulations also reduced striatal dopamine release and blunt postsynaptic responses to D2R antagonists. These results suggest that chronic downregulation of function and/or receptor expression of β2-containing nicotinic receptors alters presynaptic and postsynaptic striatal signaling to protect against aberrant motor learning. Moreover, these results suggest that cNIC treatment may alleviate motor symptoms and/or delay the deterioration of motor function in movement disorders by blocking aberrant motor learning.
Keyphrases
  • uric acid
  • smoking cessation
  • parkinson disease
  • functional connectivity
  • spinal cord
  • signaling pathway
  • metabolic syndrome
  • cell proliferation
  • drug induced
  • prefrontal cortex
  • insulin resistance