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Tegmental Area (tegmental + area)
Kinds of Tegmental Area Selected AbstractsTarget-Specific Glutamatergic Regulation of Dopamine Neurons in the Ventral Tegmental AreaJOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, Issue 4 2000Ryuichi Takahata Abstract: Dopamine (DA) neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) are thought to play a critical role in affective, motivational, and cognitive functioning. There are fundamental target-specific differences in the functional characteristics of subsets of these neurons. For example, DA afferents to the prefrontal cortex (PFC) have a higher firing and transmitter turnover rate and are more responsive to some pharmacological and environmental stimuli than DA projections to the nucleus accumbens (NAc). These functional differences may be attributed in part to differences in tonic regulation by glutamate. The present study provides evidence for this mechanism: In freely moving animals, blockade of basal glutamatergic activity in the VTA by the selective ,-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid (AMPA)/kainate antagonist LY293558 produced an increase in DA release in the NAc while significantly decreasing DA release in the PFC. These data support an AMPA receptor-mediated tonic inhibitory regulation of mesoaccumbens neurons and a tonic excitatory regulation of mesoprefrontal DA neurons. This differential regulation may result in target-specific effects on the basal output of DA neurons and on the regulatory influence of voltage-gated NMDA receptors in response to phasic activation by behaviorally relevant stimuli. [source] Inhibiting Biosynthesis and/or Metabolism of Progestins in the Ventral Tegmental Area Attenuates Lordosis of Rats in Behavioural OestrusJOURNAL OF NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 9 2005S. M. Petralia Abstract In the ventral tegmental area (VTA), lordosis of rats is facilitated by 5,-pregnan-3,-ol-20-one (3,,5,-THP). Central 3,,5,-THP results from metabolism of peripheral progesterone, from the ovaries and/or adrenals, by sequential enzymatic activity of 5,-reductase and 3,-hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase (3,-HSOR). In addition, in glial cells, cholesterol is converted into pregnenolone by the P450 side-chain cleavage enzyme (P450scc), which is then metabolized to progesterone by 3,-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, and subsequently reduced to 3,,5,-THP. We hypothesize that, in the VTA, formation of 3,,5,-THP by both metabolism and biosynthesis is necessary for facilitation of lordosis of female rats. In Experiment 1, naturally-receptive rats received bilateral VTA infusions of a P450scc inhibitor, digitoxin (1 µg/side); a 5,-reductase inhibitor, finasteride (10 µg/side); digitoxin (1 µg/side) + finasteride (10 µg/side); or vehicle and were tested 3 h later for lordosis. In Experiment 2, the effects of VTA infusions of digitoxin, finasteride, digitoxin + finasteride, or vehicle on lordosis and midbrain and plasma 3,,5,-THP levels were examined. In Experiment 3, we investigated whether infusions of 3,,5,-THP to the VTA reinstated lordosis and midbrain 3,,5,-THP levels following administration of inhibitors. VTA infusions of digitoxin, finasteride, or digitoxin + finasteride, significantly and similarly reduced lordosis and midbrain, but not plasma 3,,5,-THP levels, compared to vehicle. Following receipt of inhibitor infusions, 3,,5,-THP to the VTA restored lordosis and midbrain 3,,5,-THP levels. These data suggest that, in the VTA, both central biosynthesis of progesterone and metabolism of progesterone (from central and/or peripheral sources) to 3,,5,-THP are important for mediating lordosis of rats. [source] Genes Associated With Alcohol Abuse and Tobacco Smoking in the Human Nucleus Accumbens and Ventral Tegmental AreaALCOHOLISM, Issue 7 2010Traute Flatscher-Bader Background:, The incidence of alcohol and tobacco co-abuse is as high as 80%. The molecular mechanism underlying this comorbidity is virtually unknown, but interactions between these drugs have important implications for the development of and recovery from drug dependence. Methods:, We investigated the effects of chronic tobacco and alcohol abuse and the interaction of the 2 behaviors on global gene expression in the human nucleus accumbens using cDNA microarrays and 20 alcoholic and control cases, with and without smoking comorbidity. Changes in gene expression were established by factorial ANOVA. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering was utilized to probe the strength of the data sets. Applying real-time PCR differential expression of candidate genes was confirmed in the nucleus accumbens and explored further in a second core region of the mesolimbic system, the ventral tegmental area. Results:, Subjecting the data sets derived from microarray gene expression screening to unsupervised hierarchical clustering tied the cases into distinct groups. When considering all alcohol-responsive genes, alcoholics were separated from nonalcoholics with the exception of 1 control case. All smokers were distinguished from nonsmokers based on similarity in expression of smoking-sensitive genes. In the nucleus accumbens, alcohol-responsive genes were associated with transcription, lipid metabolism, and signaling. Smoking-sensitive genes were predominantly assigned to functional groups concerned with RNA processing and the endoplasmic reticulum. Both drugs influenced the expression of genes involved in matrix remodeling, proliferation, and cell morphogenesis. Additionally, a gene set encoding proteins involved in the canonical pathway "regulation of the actin cytoskeleton" was induced in response to alcohol and tobacco co-abuse and included. Alcohol abuse elevated the expression of candidate genes in this pathway in the nucleus accumbens and ventral tegmental area, while smoking comorbidity blunted this induction in the ventral tegmental area. Conclusions:, The region-specific modulation of alcohol-sensitive gene expression by smoking may have important consequences for alcohol-induced aberrations within the mesolimbic dopaminergic system. [source] Effect of Acute Ethanol Administration on the Release of Opioid Peptides From the Midbrain Including the Ventral Tegmental AreaALCOHOLISM, Issue 6 2009Samuel Jarjour Background:, Experimental evidence suggests that ethanol alters the activity of the endogenous opioid peptide systems in a dose and brain-region dependent manner. These alterations may influence the processes of ethanol reward and reinforcement. Thus, it was the objective of this study to investigate the response of the 3 major opioid peptide systems (endorphins, enkephalins, and dynorphins) to acute ethanol administration, at the level of the midbrain including the ventral tegmental area (midbrain/VTA), a region important for drug, including ethanol reinforcement. Methods:, Using the in vivo microdialysis technique coupled with specific solid-phase radioimmunoassay for ,-endorphin, met-enkephalin, and dynorphin A1,8, changes in the extracellular concentration of theses peptides at the level of midbrain/VTA were determined at distinct time points following the administration of 0.0 (saline), 0.8, 1.2, 1.6, 2.0, and 2.4 g ethanol/kg B.Wt. Results:, A biphasic effect of ethanol on ,-endorphin release was found, with low to medium (1.2, 1.6, and 2.0 g) but not high (2.4 g) doses of ethanol, inducing a significant increase in the dialysate content of ,-endorphin. A late increase in the dialysate content of dynorphin A1,8 was observed in response to the 1.2 g ethanol dose. However, none of the ethanol doses tested significantly altered the content of met-enkephalin in the dialysate. Conclusions:, The present findings suggest that the ethanol-induced increase of ,-endorphin release at the level of midbrain/VTA may influence alcohol reinforcement. [source] Alcohol Effects on Central Nervous System Gene Expression in Genetic Animal ModelsALCOHOLISM, Issue 2 2005William J. McBride This article summarizes the proceedings of a symposium presented at the 2004 annual meeting of the Research Society on Alcoholism in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The organizers and chairs were William J. McBride and Michael F. Miles. The presentations were (1) Molecular Triangulation on Gene Expression Patterns in Behavioral Responses to Acute Ethanol, by Robnet T. Kerns; (2) Gene Expression in Limbic Regions After Ethanol Self-Infusion Into the Posterior Ventral Tegmental Area, by Zachary A. Rodd; (3) Microarray Analysis of CNS Limbic Regions of Inbred Alcohol-Preferring and -Nonpreferring rats and Effects of Alcohol Drinking, by Wendy N. Strother and Howard J. Edenberg; and (4) Microarray Analysis of Mouse Lines Selected for Chronic Ethanol Withdrawal Severity: The Convergence of Basal, Ethanol Regulated, and Proximity to Ethanol Quantitative Trait Loci to Identify Candidate Genes, by Joel G. Hashimoto and Kristine M. Wiren. [source] Dopaminergic Neurons in the Ventral Tegmental Area of C57BL/6J and DBA/2J Mice Differ in Sensitivity to Ethanol ExcitationALCOHOLISM, Issue 7 2000Mark S. Brodie Background: The mesolimbic dopamine pathway that originates in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) is important for the rewarding effects of ethanol. Ethanol has been shown to excite dopaminergic neurons of the VTA, both in vivo and in vitro, in rats. Behavioral differences in the rewarding effects of ethanol have been observed between C57BL/6J and DBA/2J mice. The present electrophysiological study examined the effect of ethanol on individual dopaminergic VTA neurons from these two inbred mouse strains. Methods: Extracellular single unit recordings of spontaneous action potentials were made from dopaminergic VTA neurons in brain slices from either C57BL/6J or DBA/2J mice. Ethanol (10 to 160 mM) was administered in the superfusate and the mean change in firing rate produced by ethanol was measured. Results: There was no significant difference in basal spontaneous firing rate of dopaminergic VTA neurons between these two mouse strains. Ethanol caused a concentration-dependent increase in the firing rate of neurons from both mouse strains. Ethanol excited dopaminergic VTA neurons from DBA/2J mice more potently than those from C57BL/6J mice. Conclusions: The difference in sensitivity to ethanol excitation of dopaminergic VTA neurons in C57BL/6J and DBA/2J mice may contribute to differences in their behavioral response to ethanol. The fact that a given concentration of ethanol causes greater excitation of dopaminergic VTA (reward) neurons in DBA/2J mice than in C57BL/6J mice could explain why DBA/2J mice show much stronger place preference conditioning with ethanol. The higher voluntary intake of ethanol by C57BL/6J mice may be partly due to the insensitivity of their dopaminergic VTA neurons that requires them to drink a lot of ethanol to achieve sufficient excitation of reward neurons, whereas DBA/2J mice avoid oral ingestion of ethanol, despite its rewarding effect, because of their aversion to its taste. [source] Physiological functions of glucose-inhibited neuronesACTA PHYSIOLOGICA, Issue 1 2009D. Burdakov Abstract Glucose-inhibited neurones are an integral part of neurocircuits regulating cognitive arousal, body weight and vital adaptive behaviours. Their firing is directly suppressed by extracellular glucose through poorly understood signalling cascades culminating in opening of post-synaptic K+ or possibly Cl, channels. In mammalian brains, two groups of glucose-inhibited neurones are best understood at present: neurones of the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (ARC) that express peptide transmitters NPY and agouti-related peptide (AgRP) and neurones of the lateral hypothalamus (LH) that express peptide transmitters orexins/hypocretins. The activity of ARC NPY/AgRP neurones promotes food intake and suppresses energy expenditure, and their destruction causes a severe reduction in food intake and body weight. The physiological actions of ARC NPY/AgRP cells are mediated by projections to numerous hypothalamic areas, as well as extrahypothalamic sites such as the thalamus and ventral tegmental area. Orexin/hypocretin neurones of the LH are critical for normal wakefulness, energy expenditure and reward-seeking, and their destruction causes narcolepsy. Orexin actions are mediated by highly widespread central projections to virtually all brain areas except the cerebellum, including monosynaptic innervation of the cerebral cortex and autonomic pre-ganglionic neurones. There, orexins act on two specific G-protein-coupled receptors generally linked to neuronal excitation. In addition to sensing physiological changes in sugar levels, the firing of both NPY/AgRP and orexin neurones is inhibited by the ,satiety' hormone leptin and stimulated by the ,hunger' hormone ghrelin. Glucose-inhibited neurones are thus well placed to coordinate diverse brain states and behaviours based on energy levels. [source] Ephrin-A5 regulates the formation of the ascending midbrain dopaminergic pathwaysDEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 1 2009Margaret A. Cooper Abstract Dopaminergic neurons from the substantia nigra and the ventral tegmental area of the midbrain project to the caudate/putamen and nucleus accumbens, respectively, establishing the mesostriatal and the mesolimbic pathways. However, the mechanisms underlying the development of these pathways are not well understood. In the current study, the EphA5 receptor and its corresponding ligand, ephrin-A5, were shown to regulate dopaminergic axon outgrowth and influence the formation of the midbrain dopaminergic pathways. Using a strain of mutant mice in which the EphA5 cytoplasmic domain was replaced with ,-galactosidase, EphA5 protein expression was detected in both the ventral tegmental area and the substantia nigra of the midbrain. Ephrin-A5 was found in both the dorsolateral and the ventromedial regions of the striatum, suggesting a role in mediating dopaminergic axon-target interactions. In the presence of ephrin-A5, dopaminergic neurons extended longer neurites in in vitro coculture assays. Furthermore, in mice lacking ephrin-A5, retrograde tracing studies revealed that fewer neurons sent axons to the striatum. These observations indicate that the interactions between ephrin-A ligands and EphA receptors promote growth and targeting of the midbrain dopaminergic axons to the striatum. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol, 2009 [source] Distribution of progesterone receptor immunoreactivity in the midbrain and hindbrain of postnatal ratsDEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 12 2008Princy S. Quadros Abstract Nuclear steroid hormone receptors are powerful transcription factors and therefore have the potential to influence and regulate fundamental processes of neural development. The expression of progesterone receptors (PR) has been described in the developing forebrain of rats and mice, and the mammalian brain may be exposed to significant amounts of progesterone, either from maternal sources and/or de novo synthesis of progesterone from cholesterol within the brain. The present study examined the distribution of PR immunoreactive (PRir) cells within the midbrain and hindbrain of postnatal rats. The results demonstrate that PR is transiently expressed within the first 2 weeks of life in specific motor, sensory and reticular core nuclei as well as within midbrain dopaminergic cell groups such as the substantia nigra and the ventral tegmental area. Additionally, robust PRir was observed in cells of the lower rhombic lip, a transient structure giving rise to precerebellar nuclei. These results suggest that progestins and progesterone receptors may play a fundamental role in the postnatal development of numerous midbrain and hindbrain nuclei, including some areas implicated in human disorders. Additionally, these findings contribute to the increasing evidence that steroid hormones and their receptors influence neural development in a wide range of brain areas, including many not typically associated with reproduction or neuroendocrine function. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol, 2008 [source] Regional Fos expression induced by morphine withdrawal in the 7-day-old ratDEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY, Issue 7 2009Anika A. McPhie Abstract Human infants are often exposed to opiates chronically but the mechanisms by which opiates induce dependence in the infant are not well studied. In the adult the brain regions involved in the physical signs of opiate withdrawal include the periaqueductal gray area, the locus coeruleus, amygdala, ventral tegmental area, nucleus accumbens, hypothalamus, and spinal cord. Microinjection studies show that many of these brain regions are involved in opiate withdrawal in the infant rat. Our goal here was to determine if these regions become metabolically active during physical withdrawal from morphine in the infant rat as they do in the adult. Following chronic morphine or saline treatment, withdrawal was precipitated in 7-day-old pups with the opiate antagonist naltrexone. Cells positive for Fos-like immunoreactivity were quantified within select brain regions. Increased Fos-like labeled cells were found in the periaqueductal gray, nucleus accumbens, locus coeruleus, and spinal cord. These are consistent with other studies showing that the neural circuits underlying the physical signs of opiate withdrawal are similar in the infant and adult. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 51: 544,552, 2009. [source] PRECLINICAL STUDY: FULL ARTICLE: Effects of fatty acid amide hydrolase inhibition on neuronal responses to nicotine, cocaine and morphine in the nucleus accumbens shell and ventral tegmental area: involvement of PPAR-, nuclear receptorsADDICTION BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2010Antonio Luchicchi ABSTRACT The endocannabinoid system regulates neurotransmission in brain regions relevant to neurobiological and behavioral actions of addicting drugs. We recently demonstrated that inhibition by URB597 of fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH), the main enzyme that degrades the endogenous cannabinoid N-acylethanolamine (NAE) anandamide and the endogenous non-cannabinoid NAEs oleoylethanolamide and palmitoylethanolamide, blocks nicotine-induced excitation of ventral tegmental area (VTA) dopamine (DA) neurons and DA release in the shell of the nucleus accumbens (ShNAc), as well as nicotine-induced drug self-administration, conditioned place preference and relapse in rats. Here, we studied whether effects of FAAH inhibition on nicotine-induced changes in activity of VTA DA neurons were specific for nicotine or extended to two drugs of abuse acting through different mechanisms, cocaine and morphine. We also evaluated whether FAAH inhibition affects nicotine-, cocaine- or morphine-induced actions in the ShNAc. Experiments involved single-unit electrophysiological recordings from DA neurons in the VTA and medium spiny neurons in the ShNAc in anesthetized rats. We found that URB597 blocked effects of nicotine and cocaine in the ShNAc through activation of both surface cannabinoid CB1-receptors and alpha-type peroxisome proliferator-activated nuclear receptor. URB597 did not alter the effects of either cocaine or morphine on VTA DA neurons. These results show that the blockade of nicotine-induced excitation of VTA DA neurons, which we previously described, is selective for nicotine and indicate novel mechanisms recruited to regulate the effects of addicting drugs within the ShNAc of the brain reward system. [source] PRECLINICAL STUDY: FULL ARTICLE: Ghrelin increases intake of rewarding food in rodentsADDICTION BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2010Emil Egecioglu ABSTRACT We investigated whether ghrelin action at the level of the ventral tegmental area (VTA), a key node in the mesolimbic reward system, is important for the rewarding and motivational aspects of the consumption of rewarding/palatable food. Mice with a disrupted gene encoding the ghrelin receptor (GHS-R1A) and rats treated peripherally with a GHS-R1A antagonist both show suppressed intake of rewarding food in a free choice (chow/rewarding food) paradigm. Moreover, accumbal dopamine release induced by rewarding food was absent in GHS-R1A knockout mice. Acute bilateral intra-VTA administration of ghrelin increased 1-hour consumption of rewarding food but not standard chow. In comparison with sham rats, VTA-lesioned rats had normal intracerebroventricular ghrelin-induced chow intake, although both intake of and time spent exploring rewarding food was decreased. Finally, the ability of rewarding food to condition a place preference was suppressed by the GHS-R1A antagonist in rats. Our data support the hypothesis that central ghrelin signaling at the level of the VTA is important for the incentive value of rewarding food. [source] PRECLINICAL STUDY: Electroacupuncture treatment reverses morphine-induced physiological changes in dopaminergic neurons within the ventral tegmental areaADDICTION BIOLOGY, Issue 4 2009Ling Hu ABSTRACT Chronic morphine administration decreases the size of dopamine (DA) neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA). These transient morphological changes are accompanied by a reduced sensitivity of morphine-induced conditioned place preference (CPP) after chronic exposure to the drug. In this study we examined alterations in the firing rate of DAergic neurons by means of extracellular recording following chronic morphine exposure and applied 100 Hz electroacupuncture (EA) treatment to reverse the reduced firing rate of these neurons. In the first set of experiments we show that in rats, which received chronic morphine treatment for 14 days, a small dose of morphine was not able to induce a CPP response anymore. However, the sensitivity to morphine was reinstated by consecutive EA treatment for 10 days. The electrophysiological response of VTA DA neurons to morphine was markedly reduced in chronic morphine-treated rats compared to saline-treated controls. A substantial recovery of the reactivity of VTA DA neurons to morphine was observed in rats that received 100 Hz EA for 10 days. Our findings suggest that 100 Hz EA is a potential therapy for the treatment of opiate addiction by normalizing the activity of VTA DA neurons. [source] PRECLINICAL STUDY: Ghrelin administration into tegmental areas stimulates locomotor activity and increases extracellular concentration of dopamine in the nucleus accumbensADDICTION BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2007Elisabet Jerlhag ABSTRACT Ghrelin stimulates appetite, increases food intake and causes adiposity by mechanisms that include direct actions on the brain. Previously, we showed that intracerebroventricular administration of ghrelin has stimulatory and dopamine-enhancing properties. These effects of ghrelin are mediated via central nicotine receptors, suggesting that ghrelin can activate the acetylcholine,dopamine reward link. This reward link consists of cholinergic input from the laterodorsal tegmental area (LDTg) to the mesolimbic dopamine system that originates in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and projects to the nucleus accumbens. Given that growth hormone secretagogue receptors (GHSR-1A) are expressed in the VTA and LDTg, brain areas involved in reward, the present series of experiments were undertaken to examine the hypothesis that these regions may mediate the stimulatory and dopamine-enhancing effects of ghrelin, by means of locomotor activity and in vivo microdialysis in freely moving mice. We found that local administration of ghrelin into the VTA (1 µg in 1 µl) induced an increase in locomotor activity and in the extracellular concentration of accumbal dopamine. In addition, local administration of ghrelin into the LDTg (1 µg in 1 µl) caused a locomotor stimulation and an increase in the extracellular levels of accumbal dopamine. Taken together, this indicates that ghrelin might, via activation of GHSR-1A in the VTA and LDTg, stimulate the acetylcholine,dopamine reward link, implicating that ghrelin is a part of the neurochemical overlap between the reward systems and those that regulate energy balance. [source] A role for glutamate transmission in addiction to psychostimulantsADDICTION BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2000Peter W. Kalivas Psychostimulant addiction results in the emergence of undesirable behaviors such as drug craving and paranoia. Using animal models of addiction the neurobiological substrates mediating these behaviors have been examined. Studies have focused on cellular adaptations within the motive circuit that contains the nucleus accumbens, ventral tegmental area, ventral pallidum and prefrontal cortex. While long-term alterations in dopamine transmission have been clearly characterized, more recent studies reveal that important neuroadaptations are also produced in glutamate transmission. This short review provides a description of these neuroadaptations and a discussion of how these psychostimulant-induced changes may synergize to elicit addiction-related behaviors. [source] Mu opioid receptor modulation of somatodendritic dopamine overflow: GABAergic and glutamatergic mechanismsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 2 2009V. I. Chefer Abstract Mu opioid receptor (MOR) regulation of somatodendritic dopamine neurotransmission in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) was investigated using conventional microdialysis in freely moving rats and mice. Reverse dialysis of the MOR agonist DAMGO (50 and 100 ,m) into the VTA of rats produced a concentration-dependent increase in dialysate dopamine concentrations. Basal dopamine overflow in the VTA was unaltered in mice lacking the MOR gene. However, basal ,-aminobutyric acid (GABA) overflow in these animals was significantly increased, whereas glutamate overflow was decreased. Intra-VTA perfusion of DAMGO into wild-type (WT) mice increased dopamine overflow. GABA concentrations were decreased, whereas glutamate concentrations in the VTA were unaltered. Consistent with the loss of MOR, no effect of DAMGO was observed in MOR knockout (KO) mice. These data provide the first direct demonstration of tonically active MOR systems in the VTA that regulate basal glutamatergic and GABAergic neurotransmission in this region. We hypothesize that increased GABAergic neurotransmission following constitutive deletion of MOR is due to the elimination of a tonic inhibitory influence of MOR on GABAergic neurons in the VTA, whereas decreased glutamatergic neurotransmission in MOR KO mice is a consequence of intensified GABA tone on glutamatergic neurons and/or terminals. As a consequence, somatodendritic dopamine release is unaltered. Furthermore, MOR KO mice do not exhibit the positive correlation between basal dopamine levels and the glutamate/GABA ratio observed in WT mice. Together, our findings indicate a critical role of VTA MOR in maintaining an intricate balance between excitatory and inhibitory inputs to dopaminergic neurons. [source] Reward-guided learning beyond dopamine in the nucleus accumbens: the integrative functions of cortico-basal ganglia networksEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 8 2008Henry H. Yin Abstract Here we challenge the view that reward-guided learning is solely controlled by the mesoaccumbens pathway arising from dopaminergic neurons in the ventral tegmental area and projecting to the nucleus accumbens. This widely accepted view assumes that reward is a monolithic concept, but recent work has suggested otherwise. It now appears that, in reward-guided learning, the functions of ventral and dorsal striata, and the cortico-basal ganglia circuitry associated with them, can be dissociated. Whereas the nucleus accumbens is necessary for the acquisition and expression of certain appetitive Pavlovian responses and contributes to the motivational control of instrumental performance, the dorsal striatum is necessary for the acquisition and expression of instrumental actions. Such findings suggest the existence of multiple independent yet interacting functional systems that are implemented in iterating and hierarchically organized cortico-basal ganglia networks engaged in appetitive behaviors ranging from Pavlovian approach responses to goal-directed instrumental actions controlled by action-outcome contingencies. [source] Orexin B/hypocretin 2 increases glutamatergic transmission to ventral tegmental area neuronsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 8 2008S. L. Borgland Abstract The orexins (hypocretins) play a crucial role in arousal, feeding and reward. Highly relevant to these functions, orexin-containing neurons from the lateral hypothalamus project densely to the ventral tegmental area (VTA), which is the origin of dopamine projections implicated in motivation and reward. Orexin A/hypocretin 1 (oxA/hcrt-1) can enable long-term changes associated with drugs of abuse; however, the effects of orexin B/hypocretin 2 (oxB/hcrt-2) on excitatory synaptic transmission in the VTA are unknown. We used whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology in rat horizontal midbrain slices to examine the effects of oxB/hcrt-2 on excitatory synaptic transmission. We observed that oxB/hcrt-2 has distinct effects from oxA/hcrt-1 in the VTA. oxB/Hcrt-2 (100 nm) increased presynaptic glutamate release in addition to a postsynaptic potentiation of NMDA receptors (NMDARs). The oxB/hcrt-2-mediated postsynaptic potentiation of NMDARs was mediated via activation of orexin/hypocretin 2 (OX2/Hcrt-2) receptors and protein kinase C (PKC). Furthermore, the increase in transmitter release probability was also PKC-dependent, but not through activation of orexin/hypocretin 1 (OX1/Hcrt-1) or OX2/Hcrt-2 receptors. Finally, oxB/hcrt-2 or the selective OX2/Hcrt-2 receptor agonist ala11 - d -leu15 -orexin B, significantly reduced spike-timing-induced long-term potentiation. Taken together, these results support a dual role for oxB/hcrt-2 in mediating enhanced glutamatergic transmission in the VTA, and suggest that oxA/hcrt-1 and oxB/hcrt-2 exert different functional roles in modulating the enhancement of the motivational components of arousal and feeding. [source] Age-related changes in dopamine transporters and accumulation of 3-nitrotyrosine in rhesus monkey midbrain dopamine neurons: Relevance in selective neuronal vulnerability to degenerationEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 12 2008N. M. Kanaan Abstract Aging is the strongest risk factor for developing Parkinson's disease (PD). There is a preferential loss of dopamine (DA) neurons in the ventral tier of the substantia nigra (vtSN) compared to the dorsal tier and ventral tegmental area (VTA) in PD. Examining age-related and region-specific differences in DA neurons represents a means of identifying factors potentially involved in vulnerability or resistance to degeneration. Nitrative stress is among the factors potentially underlying DA neuron degeneration. We studied the relationship between 3-nitrotyrosine (3NT; a marker of nitrative damage) and DA transporters [DA transporter (DAT) and vesicular monoamine transporter-2 (VMAT)] during aging in DA subregions of rhesus monkeys. The percentage of DA neurons containing 3NT increased significantly only in the vtSN with advancing age, and the vtSN had a greater percentage of 3NT-positive neurons when compared to the VTA. The relationship between 3NT and DA transporters was determined by measuring fluorescence intensity of 3NT, DAT and VMAT staining. 3NT intensity increased with advancing age in the vtSN. Increased DAT, VMAT and DAT/VMAT ratios were associated with increased 3NT in individual DA neurons. These results suggest nitrative damage accumulates in midbrain DA neurons with advancing age, an effect exacerbated in the vulnerable vtSN. The capacity of a DA neuron to accumulate more cytosolic DA, as inferred from DA transporter expression, is related to accumulation of nitrative damage. These findings are consistent with a role for aging-related accrual of nitrative damage in the selective vulnerability of vtSN neurons to degeneration in PD. [source] Activation of afferents to the ventral tegmental area in response to acute amphetamine: a double-labelling studyEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 4 2007Joyce Colussi-Mas Abstract The ventral tegmental area (VTA), primary source of the mesocorticolimbic dopaminergic system, is regarded as a critical site for initiation of behavioural sensitization to psychostimulants. The present study was undertaken to identify the neural pathways converging on the VTA that are potentially implicated in this process. Rats were sensitized by a single exposure to amphetamine (5 mg/kg, s.c.). The distribution of VTA-projecting neurons activated by amphetamine was examined by combining retrograde transport of the cholera toxin , subunit (CTb), injected into the VTA, with immunodetection of Fos. The quantitative analysis of CTb,Fos double labelling demonstrates that amphetamine induced a rapid activation of Fos in a large number of brain areas projecting to the VTA. More than half of the CTb,Fos double-labelled neurons were located in the prefrontal cortex, lateral preoptic area,lateral hypothalamus, pontomesencephalic tegmentum, dorsal raphe nucleus, ventral pallidum and nucleus accumbens. In addition, scattered CTb,Fos double-labelled cells were observed in many other VTA afferent structures, such as claustrum, lateral septum, diagonal band,magnocellular preoptic nucleus, deep mesencephalic nucleus, oral part of pontine reticular nucleus and dorsomedial tegmental area. This suggests that systemic amphetamine activates a wide population of neurons projecting to the VTA that may be important for the modulation of neurobehavioural plasticity produced by this psychostimulant. [source] Oxytocin injected into the ventral tegmental area induces penile erection and increases extracellular dopamine in the nucleus accumbens and paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus of male ratsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 4 2007Maria Rosaria Melis Abstract The neuropeptide oxytocin (20,100 ng), induces penile erection when injected unilaterally into the caudal but not rostral mesencephalic ventral tegmental area (VTA) of male Sprague,Dawley rats. Such pro-erectile effect started 30 min after treatment and was abolished by the prior injection of d(CH2)5Tyr(Me)2 -Orn8 -vasotocin (1 µg), an oxytocin receptor antagonist injected into the same caudal ventral tegmental area or of haloperidol (1 µg), a dopamine receptor antagonist, injected either into the nucleus accumbens shell (NAs) or into the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVN) ipsilateral to the injected ventral tegmental area. Penile erection was seen 15 min after the occurrence of, or concomitantly to, an increase in extracellular dopamine and its metabolite 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) in the dialysate obtained from the nucleus accumbens or the paraventricular nucleus, which was also abolished by d(CH2)5Tyr(Me)2 -Orn8 -vasotocin (1 µg), injected into the ventral tegmental area before oxytocin. In the caudal ventral tegmental area oxytocin-containing axons/fibres (originating from the paraventricular nucleus) appeared to closely contact cell bodies of mesolimbic dopaminergic neurons retrogradely labelled with Fluorogold injected into the nucleus accumbens shell, suggesting that oxytocin effects are mediated by the activation of mesolimbic dopaminergic neurons, followed in turn by that of incerto-hypothalamic dopaminergic neurons impinging on oxytocinergic neurons mediating penile erection. As the stimulation of paraventricular dopamine receptors not only induces penile erection, but also increases mesolimbic dopamine neurotransmission by activating oxytocinergic neurons, these results provide further support for the existence of a neural circuit in which dopamine and oxytocin influence both the consummatory and motivational/rewarding aspects of sexual behaviour. [source] Glutamatergic neurons are present in the rat ventral tegmental areaEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 1 2007Tsuyoshi Yamaguchi Abstract The ventral tegmental area (VTA) is thought to play an important role in reward function. Two populations of neurons, containing either dopamine (DA) or ,-amino butyric acid (GABA), have been extensively characterized in this area. However, recent electrophysiological studies are consistent with the notion that neurons that utilize neurotransmitters other than DA or GABA are likely to be present in the VTA. Given the pronounced phenotypic diversity of neurons in this region, we have proposed that additional cell types, such as those that express the neurotransmitter glutamate may also be present in this area. Thus, by using in situ hybridization histochemistry we investigated whether transcripts encoded by genes for the two vesicular glutamate transporters, VGluT1 or VGluT2, were expressed in the VTA. We found that VGluT2 mRNA but not VGluT1 mRNA is expressed in the VTA. Neurons expressing VGluT2 mRNA were differentially distributed throughout the rostro-caudal and medio-lateral aspects of the VTA, with the highest concentration detected in rostro-medial areas. Phenotypic characterization with double in situ hybridization of these neurons indicated that they rarely co,expressed mRNAs for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH, marker for DAergic neurons) or glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD, marker for GABAergic neurons). Based on the results described here, we concluded that the VTA contains glutamatergic neurons that in their vast majority are clearly non-DAergic and non-GABAergic. [source] Depression of retinogeniculate synaptic transmission by presynaptic D2 -like dopamine receptors in rat lateral geniculate nucleusEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 2 2006G. Govindaiah Abstract Extraretinal projections onto neurons in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN) play an important role in modifying sensory information as it is relayed from the visual thalamus to neocortex. The dLGN receives dopaminergic innervation from the ventral tegmental area; however, the role of dopamine in synaptic transmission in dLGN has not been explored. In the present study, whole cell recordings were obtained to examine the actions of dopamine on glutamatergic synaptic transmission. Dopamine (2,100 µm) strongly suppressed excitatory synaptic transmission in dLGN relay neurons that was evoked by optic tract stimulation and mediated by both N -methyl- d -aspartate and non -N -methyl- d -aspartate glutamate receptors. In contrast, dopamine did not alter inhibitory synaptic transmission arising from either dLGN interneurons or thalamic reticular nucleus neurons. The suppressive action of dopamine on excitatory synaptic transmission was mimicked by the D2 -like dopamine receptor agonist bromocriptine (2,25 µm) but not by the D1 -like receptor agonist SKF38393 (10,25 µm). In addition, the dopamine-mediated suppression was antagonized by the D2 -like receptor antagonist sulpiride (10,20 µm) but not by the D1 -like receptor antagonist SCH23390 (5,25 µm). The dopamine-mediated decrease in evoked excitatory postsynaptic current amplitude was accompanied by an increase in the magnitude of paired-pulse depression. Furthermore, dopamine also reduced the frequency but not the amplitude of miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents. Taken together, these data suggest that dopamine may act presynaptically to regulate the release of glutamate at the retinogeniculate synapse and modify transmission of visual information in the dLGN. [source] Regulation of Homer and group I metabotropic glutamate receptors by nicotineEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 5 2005J. K. Kane Abstract The present study focuses on the nicotine-induced modulation of mRNA and protein expression of a number of genes involved in glutamatergic synaptic transmission in rat brain over different time periods of exposure. A subchronic (3 days) but not the chronic (7 or 14 days) administration of nicotine resulted in the up-regulation of Homer2a/b mRNA in the amygdala while in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) no change in expression of either Homer2a/b or Homer1b/c was observed. Although the increase in Homer2a/b mRNA was not translated into the protein level in the amygdala, a slight but significant up-regulation of Homer1b/c protein was observed in the same region at day 3. Both Homer forms were up-regulated at the protein level in the VTA at day 3. In the nucleus accumbens, 14 days of nicotine treatment up-regulated mRNA of Homer2b/c by 68.2% (P < 0.05), while the short form Homer1a gene was down-regulated by 65.0% at day 3 (P < 0.05). In regard to other components of the glutamatergic signalling, we identified an acute and intermittent increase in the mRNA and protein levels of mGluR1 and mGluR5 in the amygdala. In the VTA, however, the effects of nicotine on mGluR mRNA expression were long-lasting but rather specific to mGluR1. Nevertheless, mGluR1 protein levels in the VTA area were up-regulated only at day 3, as in the amygdala. These data provide further evidence for the involvement of nicotine in the glutamatergic neuronal synaptic activity in vivo, suggesting a role for the newly identified Homer proteins in this paradigm. [source] GABAA receptors signal bidirectional reward transmission from the ventral tegmental area to the tegmental pedunculopontine nucleus as a function of opiate stateEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 8 2004Steven R. Laviolette Abstract The brainstem tegmental pedunculopontine nucleus (TPP) is involved in reward signalling and is functionally and anatomically linked to the VTA. We examined the possible role of the TPP as a reward transmission output for GABAA receptors in the VTA in rats not previously exposed to opiates vs. rats that were chronically exposed to and in withdrawal from opiates or in rats that had recovered from chronic opiate exposure. Bilateral lesions of the TPP blocked the rewarding effects of a GABAA antagonist but not the rewarding effects of a GABAA receptor agonist in rats previously unexposed to opiates. This functional pattern was reversed in rats that were dependent on opiates and in withdrawal. However, once rats had recovered from chronic opiate exposure the functional parameters of VTA GABAA receptor reward signalling reverted to the pattern observed in animals that had not been exposed to opiates. These findings suggest that GABAA receptors in the VTA can regulate differential reward signalling through separate neural systems during the transition from a drug-naive to a drug-dependent and withdrawn state. [source] Generation of embryonic stem cells and transgenic mice expressing green fluorescence protein in midbrain dopaminergic neuronsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 5 2004Suling Zhao Abstract We have generated embryonic stem (ES) cells and transgenic mice with green fluorescent protein (GFP) inserted into the Pitx3 locus via homologous recombination. In the central nervous system, Pitx3 -directed GFP was visualized in dopaminergic (DA) neurons in the substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area. Live primary DA neurons can be isolated by fluorescence-activated cell sorting from these transgenic mouse embryos. In culture, Pitx3,GFP is coexpressed in a proportion of ES-derived DA neurons. Furthermore, ES cell-derived Pitx3,GFP expressing DA neurons responded to neurotrophic factors and were sensitive to DA-specific neurotoxin N-4-methyl-1, 2, 3, 6-tetrahydropyridine. We anticipate that the Pitx3,GFP ES cells could be used as a powerful model system for functional identification of molecules governing mDA neuron differentiation and for preclinical research including pharmaceutical drug screening and transplantation. The Pitx3 knock-in mice, on the other hand, could be used for purifying primary neurons for molecular studies associated with the midbrain-specific DA phenotype at a level not previously feasible. These mice would also provide a useful tool to study DA fate determination from embryo- or adult-derived neural stem cells. [source] Upregulation of [3H]methyllycaconitine binding sites following continuous infusion of nicotine, without changes of ,7 or ,6 subunit mRNA: an autoradiography and in situ hybridization study in rat brainEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 9 2002Manolo Mugnaini Abstract It is well established that exposure of experimental animals to nicotine results in upregulation of the ,4,2-subtype of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs). The aim of this study was to determine the effect of nicotine on the levels of ,7-nAChRs in rat brain, for which only partial information is available. Rats were infused with nicotine (3 mg/kg/day) or saline for 2 weeks and their brains processed for receptor autoradiography with [3H]methyllycaconitine (MLA), a radioligand with nanomolar affinity for ,7-nAChRs. In control rats binding was high in hippocampus, intermediate in cerebral cortex and hypothalamus, and low in striatum, thalamus and cerebellum. There was high correlation between the distribution of [3H]MLA binding sites and ,7 subunit mRNA (r = 0.816). With respect to saline-treated controls, nicotine-treated rats presented higher [3H]nicotine binding in 11 out of 15 brain regions analysed (average increase 46 ± 6%). In contrast, only four regions showed greater [3H]MLA binding, among which the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and cingulate cortex (mean increase 32 ± 3%). No changes in ,7 mRNA levels were observed after nicotine treatment. Similarly, there was no variation of ,6 subunit transcript in the VTA, a region which may contain MLA-sensitive (non-,7)-,6*-nAChRs (Klink et al., 2001). In conclusion, nicotine increased [3H]MLA binding, although to a smaller extent and in a more restricted regional pattern than [3H]nicotine. The enhancement of binding was not paralleled by a significant change of ,7 and ,6 subunit transcription. Finally, the present results provide the first anatomical description of the distribution of [3H]MLA binding sites in rat brain. [source] Chronic nicotine treatment changes the axonal distribution of 68 kDa neurofilaments in the rat ventral tegmental areaEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 5 2002Andrea Sbarbati Abstract Region-specific decreases of neurofilament proteins (NF) were described in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) of rats treated chronically with morphine, cocaine or alcohol. In a previous study, we demonstrated that NF levels were also changed in the VTA after chronic treatment with nicotine. The aim of this study was to clarify the submicroscopic basis of decreased immunoreactivity for NF-68, NF-160 and NF-200, as determined by using NR4, BF10 and RT97 antibodies, respectively. Microdensitometric analysis of brain sections showed that immunoreactivity for all NF was reduced in the VTA of animals exposed chronically to nicotine (0.4 mg/kg per day, 6 days of treatment), when compared to rats exposed to saline. Reduction in immunoreactivity was significant for NF-68 (P < 0.05), NF-160 (P < 0.01) and NF-200 (P < 0.05), showing a relative reduction of 34%, 42% and 38%, respectively, when compared to saline-treated rats. No difference was observed for any of the NF under study when immunoreactivity measurements in the substantia nigra were compared. Ultrastructural analysis was applied to evaluate changes in NF-68, NF-160 and NF-200 immunoreactivity in regions of the VTA that contain dopaminergic neurons following chronic nicotine treatment. At the electron microscopic level, no degenerative changes were found in neurons or glial cells of the VTA. With ultrastructural immunohistochemistry, evaluation of the homogeneity parameter of NF distribution showed a loss of homogeneity for NF-68 linked to the nicotine treatment. In areas in which NF organization appeared well preserved, analysis of the numerical density of NF revealed no significant difference for NF-68 (897/µm2 vs. 990/µm2), NF-160 (970/µm2 vs. 820/µm2) and NF-200 (1107/µm2 vs. 905/µm2) in nicotine-treated rats when compared to saline-treated rats. These results confirm that nicotine shares the same properties with cocaine and morphine in reducing NF in the VTA, a key brain structure of the rewards system, and that chronic nicotine treatment changes the axonal distribution of 68 kDa neurofilaments in the rat VTA. [source] SHORT COMMUNICATION Inhibition of GABAergic neurotransmission in the ventral tegmental area by cannabinoidsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 12 2002Bela Szabo Abstract It was shown recently that ,9-tetrahydrocannabinol, like several other drugs eliciting euphoria, stimulates dopaminergic neurons projecting from the ventral tegmental area (VTA) to the nucleus accumbens. The aim of the present work was to clarify the mechanism of this stimulatory effect. Our hypothesis was that cannabinoids depress the GABAergic inhibition of dopaminergic neurons in the VTA. Electrophysiological properties of VTA neurons in rat coronal midbrain slices were studied with the patch-clamp technique. GABAA receptor-mediated inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs) were evoked by electrical stimulation in the vicinity of the recorded neurons. The amplitude of IPSCs was depressed by the synthetic mixed CB1/CB2 cannabinoid receptor agonist WIN55212-2 (10,6 and 10,5 m). The CB1 cannabinoid receptor antagonist SR141716A (10,6 m) prevented the inhibition produced by WIN55212-2 (10,5 m). Two observations showed that IPSCs were depressed with a presynaptic mechanism. WIN55212-2 (10,5 m) did not change the amplitude of miniature IPSCs recorded in the presence of tetrodotoxin. Currents evoked by pressure ejection of muscimol from a pipette were also not changed by WIN55212-2 (10,5 m). The results indicate that activation of CB1 cannabinoid receptors inhibits GABAergic neurotransmission in the VTA with a presynaptic mechanism. Depression of the GABAergic inhibitory input of dopaminergic neurons would increase their firing rate in vivo. Accordingly, dopamine release in the projection region of VTA neurons, the nucleus accumbens, would also increase. [source] Acute and long-term changes in the mesolimbic dopamine pathway after systemic or local single nicotine injectionsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 11 2002R. Ferrari Abstract We have examined several neurochemical and behavioural parameters related to the function of the mesolimbic dopamine (DA) pathway in animals treated with nicotine following three modes of drug administration, i.e. systemic intraperitoneal injection, intra-accumbens (Acb) infusion or intraventral tegmental area (intra-VTA) microinjection. The present modes of systemic, intra-Acb and intra-VTA nicotine administration elicited comparable acute increases in dialysate DA levels from the Acb. The increase in extracellular DA levels was paralleled by a significant enhancement of locomotion in a habituated environment in the case of systemic or intra-VTA nicotine administration, whereas unilateral or bilateral intra-Acb nicotine infusion was ineffective, showing that accumbal DA increase is not sufficient to elicit locomotion in this experimental paradigm. Intra-VTA, but not systemic or intra-Acb, nicotine administration caused a long-term (at least 24-h) increase in basal dialysate DA levels from the Acb. In addition, significant increases in tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and GluR1 (but not dopamine transporter or NR1) mRNA levels in the VTA were detected 24 h after intra-VTA nicotine administration. Systemic nicotine injection caused only an increase in TH mRNA levels while intra-Acb infusion did not modify any of the mRNAs tested. The long-term increase in basal DA levels in the Acb and TH, and GluR1 mRNA levels in the VTA upon intra-VTA nicotine microinjection indicates that even a single nicotine injection can induce plastic changes of the mesolimbic DA pathway. [source] |