ePoster

CHOLINERGIC MUSCARINIC MODULATION OF DOPAMINE RELEASE DYNAMICS IN DRUG-SENSITIZED MICE

Josephine Omonigho Thestrupand 3 co-authors

Mental Health Center Copenhagen

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS01-07AM-313

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS01-07AM-313

Poster preview

CHOLINERGIC MUSCARINIC MODULATION OF DOPAMINE RELEASE DYNAMICS IN DRUG-SENSITIZED MICE poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS01-07AM-313

Abstract

Substance use disorder is a growing global issue affecting roughly 2,2% of the population. Despite that, current treatment options are insufficient. Except for alcohol use disorder and opioid use disorder, there is yet no approved medical treatment and the relapse rate is alarmingly high with 50-80% during the first year of abstinence. These statistics showcases the complexity of the disorder and underscores the urgent need for new treatment options. Previous preclinical research has shown that the administration of muscarinic 4 receptor agonist reduces drug-seeking behavior in rodents. Further, the muscarinic compound, Cobenfy, was recently approved by FDA as treatment for schizophrenia, highlighting the therapeutic potential of cholinergic modulation. Therefore, the present study investigates how positive allosteric modulation of muscarinic 4 receptor (M4 PAM) affects dopamine release in the striatum. Dopamine signaling is measured in real time in drug-sentisized mice using fiber photometry and a genetically encoded dopamine sensor. Preliminary results show that there is no effect of M4 PAM on overall dopamine release; however M4 PAM might be opposing dopamine transient frequency post amphetamine injection. Consistently, activation of the M4 receptor reduces calcium transient frequency in both D1- and D2-medium spiny neurons without affecting amplitude, indicating that cholinergic modulation alters dopamine dynamics. Ongoing experiments assess whether long-term M4 modulation, alone or in combination with a muscarinic 1 agonist (to simulate the pharmacological profile of Cobenfy), produces sustained changes in dopamine signaling in amphetamine-sensitized mice.

Mice are injected with amphetamine daily and then treated with a postive allosteric modulator of the muscarinic 4 receptor(M4 R). M4 receptors are in close proximity to dopamine 1 receptors on medium spiny neurons in the nucleus accumbens. Activation of the M4-receptor therefore opposes the activation of D1-receptors by using the same intracellular pathway of cAMP. To address, how M4 PAM affects dopamine, dopamine signalling is measured in real time with a genetically encoded dopamine sensor and fiber photometry. Preliminary fiber photometry recordings show that M4 receptor activation alters dopamine signaling pattern, not magnitude.

Recommended posters

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.