4.5 Article

Heterogeneous extracellular dopamine regulation in the subregions of the olfactory tubercle

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY
Volume 142, Issue 3, Pages 365-377

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jnc.14069

Keywords

dopamine; dopamine D2 receptors; dopamine transporters; fast-scan cyclic voltammetry; olfactory tubercle; ventral tegmental area

Funding

  1. University at Buffalo-SUNY
  2. SUNY Brain Network of Excellence Post-doctoral Fellow program
  3. Research Training on Alcohol Etiology and Treatment Training Grant [T32 AA007583]

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Recent studies show that dense dopamine (DA) innervation from the ventral tegmental area to the olfactory tubercle (OT) may play an important role in processing multisensory information pertaining to arousal and reward, yet little is known about DA regulation in the OT. This is mainly due to the anatomical limitations of conventional methods of determining DA dynamics in small heterogeneous OT subregions located in the ventral most part of the brain. Additionally, there is increasing awareness that anteromedial and anterolateral subregions of the OT have distinct functional roles in natural and psychostimulant drug reinforcement as well as in regulating other types of behavioral responses, such as aversion. Here, we compared extracellular DA regulation (release and clearance) in three subregions (anteromedial, anterolateral, and posterior) of the OT of urethane-anesthetized rats, using in vivo fast-scan cyclic voltammetry following electrical stimulation of ventral tegmental area dopaminergic cell bodies. The neurochemical, anatomical, and pharmacological evidence confirmed that the major electrically evoked catecholamine in the OT was DA across both its anteroposterior and mediolateral extent. While both D2 autoreceptors and DA transporters play important roles in regulating DA evoked in OT subregions, DA in the anterolateral OT was regulated less by the D2 receptors when compared to other OT subregions. Comparing previous data from other DA rich ventral striatum regions, the slow DA clearance across the OT subregions may lead to a high extracellular DA concentration and contribute towards volume transmission. These differences in DA regulation in the terminals of OT subregions and other limbic structures will help us understand the neural regulatory mechanisms of DA in the OT, which may elucidate its distinct functional contribution in the ventral striatum towards mediating aversion, reward and addiction processes.

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