TopicNeuroscience

dopamine depletion

Content Overview
4Total items
2Seminars
2ePosters

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Primary Motor Cortex Circuitry in a Mouse Model of Parkinson’s Disease

Olivia Swanson
Dani lab, University of Pennsylvania
Feb 9, 2022

The primary motor cortex (M1) is a major output center for movement execution and motor learning, and its dysfunction contributes to the pathophysiology of Parkinson’s disease (PD). While human studies have indicated that a loss of midbrain dopamine neurons alters M1 activation, the mechanisms underlying this phenomenon remain unclear. Using a mouse model of PD, we uncovered several shifts within M1 circuitry following dopamine depletion, including impaired excitation by thalamocortical afferents and altered excitability. Our findings add to the growing body of literature highlighting M1 as a major contributor in PD, and provide targeted neural substrates for possible therapeutic interventions.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Network dynamics in the basal ganglia and possible implications for Parkinson’s disease

Jonathan Rubin
University of Pittsburgh
Oct 14, 2021

The basal ganglia are a collection of brain areas that are connected by a variety of synaptic pathways and are a site of significant reward-related dopamine release. These properties suggest a possible role for the basal ganglia in action selection, guided by reinforcement learning. In this talk, I will discuss a framework for how this function might be performed. I will also present some recent experimental results and theory that call for a re-evaluation of certain aspects of this framework. Next, I will turn to the changes in basal ganglia activity observed to occur with the dopamine depletion associated with Parkinson’s disease. I will discuss some of the potential functional implications of some of these changes and, if time permits, will conclude with some new results that focus on delta oscillations under dopamine depletion.

ePosterNeuroscience

Loss of ‘metabolic spikes’ may explain dopamine depletion in Parkinsons’

Chaitanya Chintaluri, Tim Vogels
ePosterNeuroscience

Transient dopamine depletion increases vesicular glutamate transporter (VGLUT2) expression in midbrain dopamine neurons – implications for Parkinson’s disease

Sivakumar Srinivasan, Thomas Steinkellner, Christian Pifl, Thomas Hnasko, Ellen Gelpi Mantius, Segolene La Batide-Alanore

FENS Forum 2024

dopamine depletion coverage

4 items

Seminar2
ePoster2

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