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The Journal of Neuroscience, November 15, 2002, 22(22):9841-9849
Dopamine-Dependent Desensitization of Dopaminergic Signaling in
the Developing Mouse Striatum
Douglas S.
Kim1,
Glenda
J.
Froelick2, and
Richard D.
Palmiter1, 2, 3
1 Molecular and Cellular Biology Program,
2 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and
3 Department of Biochemistry, University of Washington,
Seattle, Washington 98195-7370
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ABSTRACT |
The dynamics of dopamine receptor signaling efficacy were
characterized in developing mice by measuring striatal c-Fos expression after dopaminergic agonist treatment at postnatal day 4 (P4) to P18.
Control mice and mutant mice, in which dopamine production is
inactivated in dopaminergic neurons by gene targeting, were treated
with saline; a synthetic dopamine precursor,
L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA) methyl
ester; a direct dopamine D1 receptor agonist, N-allyl-SKF 38393; or a dopamine reuptake
inhibitor, cocaine. L-DOPA methyl ester treatment failed to
induce striatal c-Fos immunoreactivity in control and mutant mice
deficient in dopamine production at P4 and P6 compared with saline
treatment. However, at P10 through P18 it induced abundant c-Fos
expression in mutants. At these later stages, c-Fos expression remained
at basal levels in control mice after L-DOPA methyl ester
treatment. Control and mutant mice responded to D1 receptor
agonist administration to a similar degree at P4 and P6, but the
responses were greatly enhanced in mutants at later stages. Cocaine
treatment elicited expression in control mice at P10 through P18 but
not at P4 and P6. Mutant mice were largely unresponsive to cocaine
treatment. The results suggest that striatal dopamine receptors are
capable of transducing extracellular signals at P4 and P6, but
dopaminergic neurotransmission begins thereafter. Dopaminoceptive
neurons appear to reduce their sensitivity to dopamine as dopaminergic
terminals innervate the striatum and functional neurotransmission begins.
Key words:
aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase; c-Fos; cocaine; D1 receptor; development; dopamine; dopamine-deficient; L-DOPA; mouse; µ-opioid receptor; N-allyl-SKF 38393; postnatal; striatum; tyrosine
hydroxylase
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INTRODUCTION |
The development of the dopaminergic
neurotransmission system has been investigated extensively. Proteins
involved in catecholamine synthesis, such as tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)
and aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase (AADC), are first
expressed in the rodent midbrain at embryonic day 11.5 (E11.5); nerve
terminals containing TH and AADC reach the striatum by E19 (Jaeger,
1986 ; Foster et al., 1988 ). Other presynaptic dopaminergic markers,
including the dopamine transporter, which is required for the reuptake
of released dopamine, and the vesicular monoamine transporters (VMATs),
which load synaptic vesicles with dopamine, are expressed by postnatal
day 1 (P1) (Leroux-Nicollet et al., 1990 ; Jung and Bennett, 1996 ).
Dopamine can be detected in the striatum at P0; it increases sharply
from P1 to P5 (Restani et al., 1990 ). The concentration of the dopamine metabolites dihydroxyphenylacetic acid and homovanillic acid begins to
increase in the striatum at P5 (Restani et al., 1990 ). Direct measurements of released dopamine by microdialysis indicate that dopamine secretion begins after P5 and increases to adult levels by P10
(Andersen and Gazzara, 1993 ). D1 and
D2 receptors can be detected in the striatum at
E18 (Jung and Bennett, 1996 ). D1 receptors initially exhibit an enriched patchy expression in neurons that comprise the striosomes (Murrin and Zeng, 1989 ; Liu and Graybiel, 1996 ). After P6, D1 receptor expression becomes
more uniform throughout the striatum (Murrin and Zeng, 1989 ).
D1 receptors are functionally coupled to
G-proteins and can elicit changes in intracellular signaling as early
as E19 (Jung and Bennett, 1996 ; Shearman et al., 1997 ). Although the
development of various components of the dopaminergic system has been
described previously, the ontogeny of both presynaptic dopaminergic
release and postsynaptic propagation of dopaminergic signals has not
been thoroughly documented in an in vivo setting that does
not rely on responses to electrically evoked dopamine release.
Several studies have demonstrated the inductive effects of
D1 receptor agonists, cocaine, or amphetamine on
immediate early gene expression during postnatal development in intact
animals (Weaver et al., 1992 ; Arnauld et al., 1995 ; Shearman et al.,
1997 ; Snyder-Keller and Keller, 1998 ). In addition, many investigators have shown that selective lesioning of dopaminergic neurons by intracranial delivery of the catecholaminergic neurotoxin
6-hydroxydopamine results in the sensitization of
D1 receptors to agonists in terms of immediate
early gene expression (Robertson et al., 1989 ; Paul et al., 1992 ;
LaHoste et al., 1993 ). One hypothesis is that during early postnatal
life the striatum is highly sensitive to dopaminergic agonists before
the onset of dopamine release, and that this situation can be mimicked
in adults after dopamine depletion. This report describes the onset of
functional dopaminergic release and signaling during the postnatal
period in an in vivo mouse model of dopamine depletion in
which dopaminoceptive neurons display a high sensitivity to
dopaminergic agonists (Kim et al., 2000 ). The striatum of
dopamine-deficient (Th / ;DbhTh/+)
mice provides an ideal system for the characterization of the developmental role of dopamine in striatal organization and function, because dopamine production is specifically and stably removed from
otherwise intact dopaminergic neurons and can be restored by
administration of the dopamine precursor
L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Mice. A total of 137 control and mutant mice from 26 litters were treated and analyzed in this study. All mice were used in accordance with the guidelines for animal care and experimentation established by the National Institutes of Health and the University of
Washington Animal Care Committee.
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice were bred as described previously (Zhou and Palmiter, 1995 ; Zhou et al., 1995 ). Null alleles at the Th gene locus, whose
product is rate-limiting for catecholamine synthesis, were introduced by gene targeting. TH function was restored in the noradrenergic and
adrenergic cells of Th / mice by
targeting the Th coding region downstream of the
transcriptional regulatory elements of the Dbh gene locus.
Control and
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice were bred by intercrossing
Th+/ ;DbhTh/+
mice and were on a mixed C57BL/6 × 129/SvEv genetic background. Control mice included animals that were
Th+/+,
Th+/ ,
Dbh+/+,
DbhTh/+, and combinations of these
genotypes. The day of birth was designated P0. Tail DNA was isolated,
and genotypes were determined in retrospect by Southern blot analysis
using StuI polymorphisms at both the Th and
Dbh loci. Blots were hybridized with a
KpnI/SacII fragment probe containing part of
intron 1 and part of exon 2 of the Th genomic
sequence (Zhou and Palmiter, 1995 ; Zhou et al., 1995 ).
Drug treatments. All drugs were injected intraperitoneally
in a volume of 10 µl/gm body weight. Mice were treated with 0.9% saline, L-DOPA methyl ester hydrochloride (10 mg/ml with 2.5 mg/ml ascorbic acid in PBS; Sigma, St. Louis, MO),
(±)-N-allyl-SKF 38393 hydrobromide (0.25 mg/ml in
0.9% saline; Sigma/RBI, St. Louis, MO), and ( )-cocaine HCl (2 mg/ml in 0.9% saline; Sigma/RBI). Mice were injected using 1 ml
plastic syringes and 30 gauge needles. The injection volumes ranged
from 0.02 to 0.14 ml. Mice were weighed before and after treatment to
assess the accuracy of the volume delivered.
Immunohistochemistry. Mice were treated with the drugs and
then decapitated after 2 hr. Brains were dissected, immersed overnight in 4% paraformaldehyde, cryoprotected in 30% sucrose, and frozen in
supercooled isopentane. Free-floating coronal sections (50 µm) were
immunostained using rabbit polyclonal antisera directed against c-Fos
(1:5000; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA), µ-opioid
receptor (MOR-1, 1:5000; DiaSorin, Stillwater, MN), or AADC
(1:1000; Affiniti Research Products, Ltd., Exeter, UK). A rat
monoclonal antibody was used to detect dopamine
D1 receptors (1:1000; Sigma). For c-Fos, MOR-1,
and AADC antibodies, immunoreactivity was revealed using a biotinylated
goat anti-rabbit IgG secondary antibody (Vector Laboratories,
Burlingame, CA), streptavidin-conjugated horseradish peroxidase (Zymed
Laboratories, San Francisco, CA), and nickel-enhanced, diaminobenzidine
chromogen (Sigma). For the dopamine D1 receptor
antibody, a biotinylated rabbit anti-rat IgG secondary antibody (Vector
Laboratories) that was preadsorbed to remove antibodies that reacted
with mouse Igs was used. Sections were mounted on slides, coverslipped,
and photographed. c-Fos immunoreactive nuclei were quantitated from
three striatal images for each mouse using Scion Image for Windows,
release 4.02 (Scion Corp., Frederick, MD). Images were cropped such
that only the striatum was visible; immunoreactive nuclei were counted
using the computer software. The software excluded pixels with
intensities below a preset threshold value, included only groups of
contiguous pixels fitting within a user-designated size range, and
totaled the number of remaining particles.
Statistical analysis. The low numbers of
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice obtained as a result of the complex breeding scheme and the small
litter sizes caused by lethality in embryos lacking noradrenergic
function (Thomas et al., 1995 ) necessitated the pooling of c-Fos
immunohistochemistry results from mice at P4 and P6 and mice at P10,
P14, and P18 to achieve sufficient statistical power. ANOVA and
post hoc tests were performed using Statistica for Windows,
release 6.0 (StatSoft Inc., Tulsa, OK).
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RESULTS |
Saline-elicited c-Fos immunoreactivity and MOR-1 expression
Control and mutant
(Th / ;DbhTh/+)
mice were injected with saline at P4, P6, P10, P14, and P18; c-Fos
immunoreactivity was assessed in the striatum 2 hr later.
c-Fos-positive nuclei from images of coronal sections of the striatum
as shown were counted using computer software. Similar basal levels of
nuclear immunoreactivity were observed in the striatum of
saline-treated control and mutant animals at each stage (see Figs.
1A-J, 5A).
At P4 and P6, c-Fos immunoreactivity was enriched in clusters of cells
resembling striosomes (Fig. 1C-F). The development
of striosomes was characterized by examining the striatal expression of
MOR-1 (Johnston et al., 1990 ). MOR-1 immunoreactivity in control and
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice was similar at each stage (Fig. 1K-T).
At P4, weak clusters of MOR-1 expression were evident; the number and
size of clusters were augmented at P6 and persisted from P10 through
P18.

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Figure 1.
Striatal c-Fos and MOR-1 immunoreactivity 2 hr
after treatment with saline. A, C, E, G, I, K, M, O, Q,
S, Representative control coronal sections showing the striatum
(top, dorsal; right, lateral). B,
D, F, H, J, L, N, P, R, T, Representative
Th / ;DbhTh/+
sections. A, B, c-Fos immunoreactivity in P4 striatum.
C, D, c-Fos immunoreactivity in P6 striatum. E,
F, c-Fos immunoreactivity in P10 striatum. G, H,
c-Fos immunoreactivity in P14 striatum. I, J, c-Fos
immunoreactivity in P18 striatum. K, L, MOR-1
immunoreactivity in P4 striatum. M, N, MOR-1
immunoreactivity in P6 striatum. O, P, MOR-1
immunoreactivity in P10 striatum. Q, R, MOR-1
immunoreactivity in P14 striatum. S, T, MOR-1
immunoreactivity in P18 striatum.
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L-DOPA methyl ester-elicited c-Fos immunoreactivity and
AADC expression
L-DOPA methyl ester (100 mg/kg) was administered to
control and
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice; striatal c-Fos immunoreactivity was assessed 2 hr after treatment. This dose restores striatal dopamine levels in adult Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice to 24% of the levels of control mice (Szczypka et al., 1999 ). L-DOPA methyl ester treatment did not induce
striatal c-Fos expression at P4 and P6 in either control or
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice (see Figs. 2A-D,
5B). However, a regional analysis, in which dorsomedial,
dorsolateral, ventromedial, and ventrolateral striatal quadrants were
examined separately, showed that L-DOPA methyl ester treatment significantly elevated c-Fos expression in the ventromedial striatum of
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice at P4 and P6 (data not shown). In control mice,
L-DOPA methyl ester administration did not
significantly enhance c-Fos expression above that observed with saline
treatment at P10, P14, and P18 (Fig. 2E,G,I).
However, in
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice, L-DOPA methyl ester administration induced
c-Fos expression 433, 442, and 1363% above that observed with saline
treatment at P10, P14, and P18, respectively (Fig.
2F,H,J).

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Figure 2.
Striatal c-Fos and AADC immunoreactivity 2 hr
after treatment with L-DOPA methyl ester (100 mg/kg).
A, C, E, G, I, K, M, O, Q, S, Representative control
coronal sections showing the striatum (top, dorsal;
right, lateral). B, D, F, H, J, L, N, P, R,
T, Representative
Th / ;DbhTh/+
sections. A, B, c-Fos immunoreactivity in P4 striatum.
C, D, c-Fos immunoreactivity in P6 striatum. E,
F, c-Fos immunoreactivity in P10 striatum. G, H,
c-Fos immunoreactivity in P14 striatum. I, J, c-Fos
immunoreactivity in P18 striatum. K, L, AADC
immunoreactivity in P4 striatum. M, N, AADC
immunoreactivity in P6 striatum. O, P, AADC
immunoreactivity in P10 striatum. Q, R, AADC
immunoreactivity in P14 striatum. S, T, AADC
immunoreactivity in P18 striatum.
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AADC expression was examined in striatal sections as a marker of
presynaptic dopaminergic terminals. AADC immunoreactivity in control
and
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice was similar at each stage (Fig. 2K-T).
At P4, weak clusters of AADC expression were evident in the lateral
striatum. The number and size of clusters was augmented from P6 to P10;
AADC expression increased outside of clustered terminals from P14 to P18.
N-allyl-SKF 38393-elicited c-Fos immunoreactivity
and dopamine D1 receptor expression
The D1-like receptor agonist
N-allyl-SKF 38393 (2.5 mg/kg) was administered to control
and
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice; striatal c-Fos immunoreactivity was assessed 2 hr after treatment. A preliminary experiment indicated that this dose elicited a
submaximal c-Fos response in control mice. At a 12.5 mg/kg dose, both
control and mutant mice responded equivalently at P18 (data not shown).
A submaximal dose (2.5 mg/kg) was used to reveal potential differences
between control and mutant mice. The D1 receptor
agonist induced striatal c-Fos expression in both control and
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice at each stage (see Figs.
3A-J, 5C). In
control mice, D1 receptor agonist administration
induced c-Fos expression 87, 64, 155, 75, and 49% above that observed
with saline treatment at P4, P6, P10, P14, and P18, respectively (Fig.
3A,C,E,G,I). In Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice, D1 receptor agonist administration induced
expression 108, 236, 458, 368, and 1055% above that observed with
saline treatment at P4, P6, P10, P14, and P18, respectively (Fig.
3B,D,F,H,J). Although regional analysis revealed
significant induction of immunoreactivity in the ventromedial and
ventrolateral striatum for control and Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice at both P4 and P6 and P14, P10, and P18, significant induction in
the dorsal striatum was observed only in the dorsolateral striatum of
control mice at P4 and P6 and
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice at P10, P14, and P18 (data not shown).

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Figure 3.
Striatal c-Fos and dopamine D1
receptor immunoreactivity 2 hr after treatment with
N-allyl-SKF 38393 (2.5 mg/kg). A, C, E, G, I, K,
M, O, Q, S, Representative control coronal sections showing the
striatum (top, dorsal; right, lateral).
B, D, F, H, J, L, N, P, R, T, Representative
Th / ;DbhTh/+
sections. A, B, c-Fos immunoreactivity in P4 striatum.
C, D, c-Fos immunoreactivity in P6 striatum. E,
F, c-Fos immunoreactivity in P10 striatum. G, H,
c-Fos immunoreactivity in P14 striatum. I, J, c-Fos
immunoreactivity in P18 striatum. K, L, D1
receptor immunoreactivity in P4 striatum. M, N,
D1 receptor immunoreactivity in P6 striatum. O,
P, D1 receptor immunoreactivity in P10 striatum.
Q, R, D1 receptor immunoreactivity in P14
striatum. S, T, D1 receptor immunoreactivity
in P18 striatum.
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D1 receptor expression was examined in
striatal sections as a marker of postsynaptic dopaminoceptive neurons.
D1 receptor immunoreactivity in
control and
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice was similar at each stage (Fig. 3K-T). At P4,
weak clusters of D1 receptor expression were
evident in the lateral striatum. The number and size of clusters were
augmented from P6 to P10; D1 receptor expression
increased outside of clustered terminals from P14 to P18.
Cocaine-elicited c-Fos immunoreactivity
Control and
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice were also treated with cocaine (20 mg/kg), a selective
monoaminergic reuptake inhibitor; c-Fos immunoreactivity was assessed
in the striatum 2 hr later. This dose was chosen because treatment with
higher doses caused mice at P4 and P6 to die. In control mice, cocaine
administration did not enhance c-Fos expression at P4 and P6, but it
induced responses 304, 43, and 94% above those observed
with saline treatment at P10, P14, and P18, respectively (Figs. 4A,C,E,G,
5D). Cocaine significantly elevated c-Fos expression in the dorsolateral, ventromedial, and ventrolateral striatum of control mice at P10, P14, and P18 (data not
shown). In
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice, cocaine administration induced some striatal c-Fos expression. However, the responses of mutants to cocaine were less than those of
control mice at P10, P14, and P18 (Fig.
4F,H,J). Cocaine can have nonselective effects
at monoamine transporters other than the dopamine transporter, such as
the serotonin and norepinephrine transporters (Kuhar et al., 1991 ;
Rocha et al., 1998 ), so a component of the immediate early gene
response to cocaine can be independent of dopamine secretion.

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Figure 4.
Striatal c-Fos immunoreactivity 2 hr after
treatment with cocaine (20 mg/kg). A, C, E, G, I,
Representative control coronal sections showing the striatum
(top, dorsal; right, lateral). B,
D, F, H, J, Representative
Th / ;DbhTh/+
sections. A, B, c-Fos immunoreactivity in P4 striatum.
C, D, c-Fos immunoreactivity in P6 striatum. E,
F, c-Fos immunoreactivity in P10 striatum. G, H,
c-Fos immunoreactivity in P14 striatum. I, J, c-Fos
immunoreactivity in P18 striatum.
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Figure 5.
Quantitation of striatal c-Fos-positive
nuclei 2 hr after treatments and a homeostatic model of dopamine
receptor signaling efficacy during postnatal development. Values
represent c-Fos-positive nuclei quantitated from images of entire
striatal sections and are reported as means ± SEM at various
postnatal stages. A, Values after saline treatment.
B, Values after L-DOPA methyl ester (100 mg/kg) treatment. C, Values after
N-allyl-SKF 38393 (2.5 mg/kg) treatment.
D, Values after cocaine (20 mg/kg) treatment. When mice
at P4 and P6 and mice at P10, P14, and P18 were grouped together,
three-way ANOVA revealed a significant interaction of phenotype, age,
and drug (F = 20.99; df = 3, 121;
p < 0.0001). Investigation of the causes of the
complex interaction by two-way ANOVA revealed a significant interaction
of age and drug for control mice (F = 9.24; df = 3, 92; p < 0.0001) and mutant mice
(F = 7.25; df = 3, 29; p < 0.0001). ***p < 0.001, greater than saline
response of pooled P4 and P6 control mice by one-tailed Dunnett's
test.  p < 0.01,    p < 0.0001, greater than saline response of pooled P10, P14, and P18
control mice by one-tailed Dunnett's test.  p < 0.01, greater than saline response of pooled P4 and P6
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice by one-tailed Dunnett's test. §§§p < 0.001, greater than saline response of pooled P10, P14, and P18
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice by one-tailed Dunnett's test. E, Before P4 and P6,
midbrain dopaminergic terminals migrate into the striatum and produce
dopamine, and some striatal neurons already express dopamine receptors.
Dopamine receptor signaling efficacy is high. F, Between
P6 and P10, presynaptic dopaminergic release and the propagation of
signals in postsynaptic neurons begin. Dopamine signaling efficacy is
reduced. G, From P10 to P18 and during adulthood,
dopaminergic neurotransmission continues at a steady rate.
Dopamine receptor signaling efficacy stabilizes at a low plateau.
White squares, Control mice; black
squares,
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice.
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Behavioral observations and body weight data
There were few visible effects on the motor function of mice
treated with various dopaminergic compounds from P4 to P10.
L-DOPA methyl ester and N-allyl-SKF 38393 induced locomotion, rearing, and stereotyped grooming movements at P14
and P18; the effects were more pronounced in mutant mice. Cocaine
depressed activity at P14 and P18. The body weights of all of the
control and mutant mice used in this study were similar at P4 and P6
(means ± SEM; P4 control, 3.39 ± 0.07 gm, n = 22; P4 mutant, 3.21 ± 0.18 gm, n = 9; P6
control, 4.70 ± 0.15 gm, n = 20; P6 mutant,
4.32 ± 0.31 gm, n = 9). However, the body weights
of control and mutant mice began to diverge at P10 (P10 control,
8.19 ± 0.13 gm, n = 20; P10 mutant, 6.04 ± 0.22 gm, n = 8). At P14, control mice weighed 9.17 ± 0.35 gm (n = 18), and mutant mice weighed 5.41 ± 0.38 gm (n = 7). By P18, control mice (10.18 ± 0.40 gm, n = 20) weighed almost twice as much as mutant
mice (5.49 ± 0.55 gm, n = 4). Two-way ANOVA
revealed a significant interaction of phenotype and age in terms of
body weight (F = 17.59; df = 4, 127;
p < 0.0001). Mean body weights between control and
mutant mice were significantly different at P10, P14, and P18
(p < 0.01, p < 0.0001, p < 0.0001, respectively, by Scheffé's test).
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DISCUSSION |
The results suggest that dopamine is not required for the
structural organization of the dopaminergic neurotransmission
machinery, but that dopamine is necessary for normal maturation of
striatal dopaminoceptive neurons. The role of dopamine in striatal
development was explored by measuring c-Fos expression after treatment
with dopaminergic agonists. This approach was useful, because
activation of postsynaptic D1 receptors, which
are coupled to Gs- and
Golf-proteins, leads to stimulation of adenylyl
cyclase (Hervé et al., 1993 ). Immediate early gene induction
reflects acute elevations of cAMP-dependent signaling within striatal
neurons (Konradi et al., 1996 ; Liu and Graybiel, 1996 ; Andersson et
al., 2001 ), although it has been shown that c-fos
transcriptional activation requires convergent cAMP- and
calcium-dependent signals (Robertson et al., 1995 ; Konradi et al.,
1996 ). Thus, striatal c-Fos induction can be used as an indicator of
D1 receptor signal transduction in
vivo.
At P4 and P6, both control and
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice displayed increased c-Fos expression in response to the direct
D1 receptor agonist, indicating that functional
D1 receptor signaling can occur at these early
stages. However, L-DOPA methyl ester failed to
induce c-Fos expression at P4 and P6. L-DOPA
methyl ester is presumably taken up into neurons, converted into
dopamine in AADC-expressing cells, and loaded into synaptic vesicles by
VMATs. The expression of c-Fos after acute L-DOPA
methyl ester treatment of
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice likely results from the activity-dependent release of dopamine from presynaptic neurons, the activation of postsynaptic
D1 receptors, and the induction of cAMP-dependent
gene transcription. The lack of c-Fos induction after
L-DOPA methyl ester treatment in
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice, even in the presence of functional D1
receptors, suggests that dopaminergic neurotransmission has not reached
significant levels at P4 and P6. However, a regional analysis of c-Fos
expression showed that L-DOPA methyl ester
treatment significantly elevated immunoreactivity in the ventromedial
striatum of mutants at P4 and P6. In the ventromedial striatum, it may
thus appear that dopamine release begins at or before P6 (Figs.
1D, 2D). But cocaine failed to
induce striatal c-Fos expression at P4 and P6 in control mice.
Furthermore, significant cocaine responses were not observed in control
mice at P4 and P6 when striatal quadrants were analyzed separately. The
ability of cocaine to induce striatal c-Fos expression in control mice
requires functional dopamine synthesis, release, activation of
postsynaptic receptors, and reuptake through presynaptic transporters
(Drago et al., 1996 ; Rocha et al., 1998 ), which are all hallmark
features of dopaminergic neurotransmission. The absence of a
cocaine-elicited response, although a D1 receptor
agonist induced expression, suggests that dopaminergic
neurotransmission does not reach significant levels until after P4 and
P6 in the striatum (Fig. 5E).
At P10, P14, and P18, cocaine treatment elicited an immediate early
gene response in the control striatum, indicating that dopamine release
has begun by these stages (Fig. 5F). This idea is
supported by the observation that L-DOPA methyl
ester also evoked abundant c-Fos expression in mutant mice at P10, P14,
and P18. Thus, although the presynaptic machinery required for dopamine production, vesicular loading, and release and postsynaptic systems needed for dopaminergic signaling are present at P1 (Jaeger, 1986 ; Foster et al., 1988 ; Leroux-Nicollet et al., 1990 ; Restani et al.,
1990 ; Andersen and Gazzara, 1993 ; Jung and Bennett, 1996 ), striatal
dopaminergic neurotransmission apparently does not reach significant
levels until after P6. This delay suggests that some factor not
considered here limits the onset of functional synaptic transmission.
This limiting factor could be electrical activity driven by afferents
received by midbrain dopaminergic neurons. It is also possible that the
development of other inputs to the striatum, such as cortical
glutamatergic neurons, may be limiting, because glutamate receptor
activation is believed to act in concert with dopamine signaling to
induce c-Fos expression (Konradi et al., 1996 ). The responsiveness of
D1 receptors in control mice declined from P10
through P18, as evidenced by the stable level of c-Fos induction after
D1 receptor agonist administration even as the
absolute number of D1 receptor-expressing
striatal cells increased. The D1 agonist, which
acts directly on postsynaptic neurons, elicited much more
immunoreactivity in mutants compared with control mice at P10 through
P18, indicating that striatal D1 receptor
signaling efficacy is reduced in control mice as a consequence of the
onset of functional dopaminergic neurotransmission after P6 (Fig.
5G).
In control mice, clustered c-Fos expression at P10 and P14 was observed
after L-DOPA methyl ester treatment, whereas in mutants, widespread striatal nuclear immunoreactivity was evident. Clustered c-Fos expression may represent enhanced cAMP/calcium signaling within
striosomal neurons, which receive preferential presynaptic dopaminergic
innervation (Roffler-Tarlov and Graybiel, 1987 ) and in which
D1 receptors are enriched in their expression
during perinatal life (Murrin and Zeng, 1989 ; Liu and Graybiel, 1996 ). One possibility is that this difference in the pattern of c-Fos expression between control and mutant mice is attributable to a
requirement for dopamine in the formation and organization of striosomes. However, striosomes appeared to develop comparably in
control and mutant mice, as assessed by examination of MOR-1 expression. Another possibility is that presynaptic terminals from
midbrain afferents are disorganized in the striatum of
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice. But dopaminergic differentiation and axonal guidance into the
striatum also proceeded normally in control and mutant mice, with
clustered AADC immunoreactivity appearing at early stages, followed by
increased AADC expression in regions around clusters at later stages. A
third possibility is that enriched D1 receptor localization in striosomes is disrupted in the mutant striatum, but
D1 receptor expression appeared similar in both
groups with enriched striosomal expression at P4 and P6, followed by
more uniform distribution at later stages. A final possibility is that the responsiveness of striatal D1 receptors is
dampened as functional dopaminergic neurotransmission begins. In the
absence of dopaminergic input in the striatum of
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice, the sensitivity of D1 receptors remained
high throughout the striatum, and dopamine release induced widespread
c-Fos expression after L-DOPA methyl ester
treatment. D1 receptor abundance appeared similar
in the control and
Th / ;DbhTh/+
striatum, which is consistent with previous results showing that receptor levels in adult control and mutant mice are similar (Kim et
al., 2000 ). The results are consistent with enhanced c-Fos responses
observed in D1 receptor agonist- and
cocaine-treated rats during early postnatal life and the subsequent
decline of sensitivity to these drugs during adolescence (Weaver et
al., 1992 ; Arnauld et al., 1995 ; Shearman et al., 1997 ; Snyder-Keller and Keller, 1998 ).
cAMP signaling contributes to striatal immediate early gene induction,
but calcium-dependent signaling resulting from NMDA receptor activation
is also important (Konradi et al., 1996 ). Previous electrophysiological
studies have characterized the development of excitatory cortical
inputs to striatal medium spiny neurons. The number of glutamatergic
synapses increases until P18, but spontaneous electrical activity in
the striatum is rare before P14 because of low cortical activity
(Tepper et al., 1998 ). c-Fos expression elicited by dopaminergic
agonists before P14 occurs against a stable background of low
glutamatergic signaling. After P14, cortical excitatory input may play
a role in shaping the responsiveness of dopamine receptors in terms of
immediate early gene induction. The probability of glutamate release at
striatal synapses is relatively high until P19, when it is reduced in a dopamine D2 receptor-dependent manner (Tang et
al., 2001 ). Thus, dopamine secretion contributes to the development of
glutamatergic synapses after P19. This change in glutamatergic function
may in turn alter the responsiveness of dopamine receptors in terms of
c-Fos expression.
The absence of behavioral responses to dopaminergic agonists at P4, P6,
and P10 suggests that dopamine plays a minimal role in modulating motor
activity at these stages. At P10, mutant mice had lower body weights
than control mice. By P14, the severe hypoactive phenotype of
Th / ;DbhTh/+
mice becomes apparent (Zhou and Palmiter, 1995 ). Previous reports have
shown that dopaminergic agonists can induce suckling behavior in young
rodents (Fon et al., 1997 ), which is consistent with a role for
dopamine in the ingestive behavior of pups or behaviors related to
eliciting maternal care.
The hypothesis that synaptic formation and maintenance are dependent on
activity-related neurotransmitter release has been addressed in several
experimental systems (Shatz, 1996 ; Constantine-Paton and Cline, 1998 ;
Sanes and Lichtman, 1999 ; Verhage et al., 2000 ). The results presented
here suggest that dopaminergic neurotransmission is not absolutely
required for the targeting of presynaptic neurons to their sites of
innervation. Instead, the role of dopamine in developing synapses
appears to be related to dampening the response of striatal
postsynaptic receptors to the neurotransmitter itself such that a
slowly shifting homeostatic relationship between the quantity of
dopamine released and the efficacy of dopamine receptor signaling is
established (Fig. 5E-G). Developing neuronal circuits are
thought to achieve balanced synaptic transmission through the excessive
elaboration of presynaptic contacts and the subsequent pruning of
synapses to reduce neuronal information flow to appropriate levels
(Purves and Lichtman, 1980 ). This in vivo study suggests that developing dopaminergic synapses are tuned by the reduction of the
sensitivity of receptors in striatal neurons. It would be interesting
to determine whether this type of modulation of postsynaptic
sensitivity occurs at other developing synapses; if this were not the
case, it would be interesting to understand what makes dopaminergic
synapses peculiar.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received April 29, 2002; revised Aug. 13, 2002; accepted Sept. 5, 2002.
This work was supported by a graduate research fellowship from the
National Science Foundation (D.S.K.). We thank V. Denenberg for help
with statistical analysis.
Correspondence should be addressed to Richard D. Palmiter, Department
of Biochemistry, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of
Washington, Health Sciences Building, Room J661E, 1959 Northeast Pacific Street, Seattle, WA 98195-7370. E-mail:
palmiter{at}u.washington.edu.
 |
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