Short-Latency Activation of Striatal Spiny Neurons via Subcortical Visual Pathways
Male
Neurons
Baclofen
Superior Colliculi
Muscimol
Dopamine
Bicuculline
Corpus Striatum
Membrane Potentials
Rats
Time
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Thalamus
Animals
Rats, Long-Evans
Visual Pathways
Enzyme Inhibitors
Rats, Wistar
GABA Modulators
Photic Stimulation
Visual Cortex
DOI:
10.1523/jneurosci.4815-08.2009
Publication Date:
2009-05-13T17:33:58Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
The striatum is a site of integration of neural pathways involved in reinforcement learning. Traditionally, inputs from cerebral cortex are thought to be reinforced by dopaminergic afferents signaling the occurrence of biologically salient sensory events. Here, we detail an alternative route for short-latency sensory-evoked input to the striatum requiring neither dopamine nor the cortex. Using intracellular recording techniques, we measured subthreshold inputs to spiny projection neurons (SPNs) in urethane-anesthetized rats. Contralateral whole-field light flashes evoked weak membrane potential responses in approximately two-thirds of neurons. However, after local disinhibitory injections of the GABAAantagonist bicuculline into the deep layers of the superior colliculus (SC), but not the overlying visual cortex, strong, light-evoked, depolarizations to the up state emerged at short latency (115 ± 14 ms) in all neurons tested. Dopamine depletion using α-methyl-para-tyrosine had no detectable effect on striatal visual responses during SC disinhibition. In contrast, local inhibitory injections of GABA agonists, muscimol and baclofen, into the parafascicular nucleus of the thalamus blocked the early, visual-evoked up-state transitions in SPNs. Comparable muscimol-induced inhibition of the visual cortex failed to suppress the visual responsiveness of SPNs induced by SC disinhibition. Together, these results suggest that short-latency, preattentive visual input can reach the striatum not only via the tecto-nigro-striatal route but also through tecto-thalamo-striatal projections. Thus, after the onset of a biologically significant visual event, closely timed short-latency thalamostriatal (glutamate) and nigrostriatal (dopamine) inputs are likely to converge on striatal SPNs, providing depolarizing and neuromodulator signals necessary for synaptic plasticity mechanisms.
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