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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 1, 2002, 22(13):5705-5712
Functional Domains in Dorsal Striatum of the Nonhuman Primate Are
Defined by the Dynamic Behavior of Dopamine
Stephanie J.
Cragg,
Christopher J.
Hille, and
Susan A.
Greenfield
University Department of Pharmacology, Oxford OX1 3QT,
United Kingdom
The dorsal striatum comprises a continuum of distinct functional
domains, limbic, associative, and sensorimotor. In the primate it
exclusively subdivides further into two nuclei, the putamen and
caudate. Dopamine (DA) transmission is differentially affected between
these nuclei in neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson's and by
psychostimulants such as cocaine. Because rodent systems can offer only
limited insight into DA systems of the human brain, a fuller
appreciation of DA transmission and its role in dysfunction requires
direct study in primates.
DA behavior was explored in the major functional domains of the caudate
nucleus and compared with the putamen, using fast-scan cyclic
voltammetry in striatal sections from the marmoset (Callithrix jacchus). There was domain-specific variation in extracellular DA transients [i.e., concentration ([DA]o)
released by a single stimulus and the rate maximum of DA uptake,
Vmax]. Across nuclei, functional rather
than anatomical regions were differentiated by these dynamics. The
largest, fastest DA transients were at motor-associated loci. Evoked
[DA]o at physiological frequencies was differently
frequency-sensitive between functional domains but not between
anatomical nuclei. In contrast, presynaptic depression was not an index
of regional differentiation, recovering with similar kinetics at all loci.
Within a given functional domain of dorsal striatum, the dynamics of DA
release and uptake are similar for the putamen and the caudate nucleus.
Conversely, distinct functional domains are defined by these DA
dynamics, in a manner more marked in primates than in rodents. These
data from the primate brain highlight differences in DA availability
that may be central to DA function and dysfunction in the human.
Key words:
caudate; putamen; Parkinson's disease; basal ganglia; dopamine transporter; dopamine uptake; marmoset; voltammetry; corticostriatal; nigrostriatal; striatonigral; mesostriatal; cocaine; synaptic depression; primate; ventral striatum
Copyright © 2002 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/02/22135705-08$05.00/0
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