Adaptor Protein-3 Produces Synaptic Vesicles that Release Phasic Dopamine.
Shweta JainAndrew G YeeJames MaasSarah GierokHongfei XuJasmine StansilJacob EriksenAlexandra NelsonKatlin SilmChristopher P FordRobert H EdwardsPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Reinforcement learning requires the phasic dopamine produced by burst firing but synaptic vesicle depletion limits the ability to convey information at high firing rates. We now find that AP-3 has two independent roles in dopamine release. First, AP-3 confers the axonal polarity of dopamine release by targeting vesicular monoamine transporter 2 (VMAT2) to the axon. Second, AP-3 acting locally at the nerve terminal produces synaptic vesicles that respond specifically to high frequency stimulation. Consistent with this, loss of AP-3 impairs reinforcement learning and this reflects the defect in release at high frequency, not the reduction in axonal dopamine.