Abstract

Micro Electrode Arrays were used to simultaneously record spontaneous extracellular action potentials from 10 to 30 dopamine neurons in acute brain slices from the lateral Ventral Tegmental Area (VTA) of the rat. The spike train of an individual neuron was used to characterize the firing pattern: firing rate, firing irregularity and oscillation frequency. Functional connectivity between a pair of neurons was quantified by the Paired Phase Consistency (PPC), taking the oscillation frequency as reference. Under baseline conditions the PPC was significantly different from zero and 42 of the 386 pairs of VTA neurons showed significant coupling. Fifty percent of the recorded dopamine neurons were part of the coupled VTA network. Raising extracellular potassium from 3.5 to 5 mM increased the mean firing rate of the dopamine neurons by 45%. The same increase could be induced by bath application of 300 μm glutamate. High potassium reduced the PPC, but it did not change during the glutamate application. Our findings imply that manipulating excitability has distinct and specific consequences for functional connectivity in the VTA network that cannot be directly predicted from the changes in neuronal firing rates. Functional connectivity reflects the spatial organization and synchronization of the VTA output and thus represents a unique element of the message that is sent to the mesolimbic projection area. It adds a dimension to pharmacological manipulation of the VTA micro circuit that might help to understand the pharmacological (side) effects of e.g., anti-psychotic drugs.

Highlights

  • The ventral tegmental area (VTA) is a midbrain nucleus alongside the substantia nigra

  • In this study we quantify the Paired Phase Consistency (PPC) between pairs of neurons and interpret it as a measure of functional connectivity; it appears as an emerging property during excitability modulation of dopaminergic neurons in acute brain slices of the VTA

  • Comparison of the mean PPC for neuron pairs during baseline conditions, with the same pairs during 300 μM glutamate administration and the connections made by neurons newly recruited by 300 μM glutamate

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The ventral tegmental area (VTA) is a midbrain nucleus alongside the substantia nigra. The most abundant neuron type in the VTA is the dopamine neuron (Nair-Roberts et al, 2008) which projects to mesolimbic and mesocortical structures. Dopamine neurons form local synaptic connections with each other (Bayer and Pickel, 1990) but they are interconnected with glutamatergic and GABAergic neurons (Omelchenko and Sesack, 2009). Many details of this local microcircuit are still under intense investigation. In vivo VTA dopamine neurons exhibit spontaneous activity and generate single action potentials

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call