4.5 Review

Dopaminergic rules of engagement for memory in Drosophila

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN NEUROBIOLOGY
Volume 43, Issue -, Pages 56-62

Publisher

CURRENT BIOLOGY LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.conb.2016.12.011

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Funding

  1. Richard and Susan Smith Family Foundation, Newton, MA
  2. Brown Institute of Brain Science Center for Nervous System Function COBRE Project leader award [NIGMS 5P20GM103645-03]
  3. NIH [R01AA019526, R21AA022404, R21DA040439]
  4. Effie Marie Cain Scholarship in Biomedical Research from UT Southwestern

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Dopamine is associated with a variety of conserved responses across species including locomotion, sleep, food consumption, aggression, courtship, addiction and several forms of appetitive and aversive memory. Historically, dopamine has been most prominently associated with dynamics underlying reward, punishment, or salience. Recent emerging evidence from Drosophila supports a role in all of these functions, as well as additional roles in the interplay between external sensation and internal states and forgetting of the very memories dopamine helped encode. We discuss how cell-specific resolution and manipulation are elucidating the rules of dopamine's involvement in encoding valence and memory.

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