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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 2000, 20(15):5575-5580
Amphetamine Blocks Long-Term Synaptic Depression in the Ventral
Tegmental Area
Susan
Jones,
Johanna L.
Kornblum, and
Julie A.
Kauer
Department of Neurobiology, Duke University School of Medicine,
Durham, North Carolina 27710
The mesolimbic dopamine system is essential for reward-seeking
behavior, and drugs of abuse are thought to usurp the normal functioning of this pathway. A growing body of evidence suggests that
glutamatergic synapses on dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental
area (VTA) are modified during exposure to addictive drugs, producing
sensitization, a progressive augmentation in the rewarding properties
of psychostimulant drugs with repeated exposure. We have tested the
hypothesis that psychostimulant exposure interferes with the synaptic
plasticity of glutamatergic inputs to the VTA. We find that excitatory
synapses onto VTA dopamine neurons exhibit long-term depression (LTD)
in response to low-frequency stimulation and modest depolarization. LTD
in the VTA is NMDA receptor-independent but is dependent on
intracellular Ca2+ and can be induced by driving
Ca2+ into the dopamine neuron. Brief exposure to
amphetamine entirely blocks LTD at glutamatergic synapses in the VTA,
by releasing endogenous dopamine that acts at D2 dopamine receptors.
The block of LTD is selective, because amphetamine has no effect on
hippocampal LTD. The LTD we have discovered in the VTA is likely to be
an important component of excitatory control of the reward pathway; amphetamine will inhibit LTD, removing this normal brake on the glutamatergic drive to dopamine neurons. This effect of amphetamine represents an important mechanism by which normal function of the brain
reward system may be impaired during substance abuse.
Key words:
long-term depression; VTA; dopamine; amphetamine; sensitization; psychostimulant; addiction
Copyright © 2000 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/00/20155575-06$05.00/0
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