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Intrinsic dopamine and acetylcholine dynamics in the striatum of mice.

Anne C KrokMarta MaltesePratik MistryXiaolei MiaoYu-Long LiNicolas X Tritsch
Published in: Nature (2023)
External rewards such as food and money are potent modifiers of behaviour 1,2 . Pioneering studies established that these salient sensory stimuli briefly interrupt the tonic discharge of neurons that produce the neuromodulators dopamine (DA) and acetylcholine (ACh): midbrain DA neurons (DANs) fire a burst of action potentials that broadly elevates DA in the striatum 3,4 at the same time that striatal cholinergic interneurons (CINs) produce a characteristic pause in firing 5,6 . These phasic responses are thought to create unique, temporally limited conditions that motivate action and promote learning 7-11 . However, the dynamics of DA and ACh outside explicitly rewarded situations remain poorly understood. Here we show that extracellular DA and ACh levels fluctuate spontaneously and periodically at a frequency of approximately 2 Hz in the dorsal striatum of mice and maintain the same temporal relationship relative to one another as that evoked by reward. We show that this neuromodulatory coordination does not arise from direct interactions between DA and ACh within the striatum. Instead, we provide evidence that periodic fluctuations in striatal DA are inherited from midbrain DANs, while striatal ACh transients are driven by glutamatergic inputs, which act to locally synchronize the spiking of CINs. Together, our findings show that striatal neuromodulatory dynamics are autonomously organized by distributed extra-striatal afferents. The dominance of intrinsic rhythms in DA and ACh offers new insights for explaining how reward-associated neural dynamics emerge and how the brain motivates action and promotes learning from within.
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