ePoster

TRANSCRIPTIONAL SIGNATURES OF PYSCHOSTIMULANTS IN THE TAIL STRIATUM

Eva Goetzand 5 co-authors

Inserm

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS07-10AM-167

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS07-10AM-167

Poster preview

TRANSCRIPTIONAL SIGNATURES OF PYSCHOSTIMULANTS IN THE TAIL STRIATUM poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS07-10AM-167

Abstract

Efficient sensory processing is essential for survival and multisensory integration helps prioritize actions in response to significant events. However, disruptions in sensory processing can lead to over- or under-responsiveness, often linked to impaired inhibition and goal-directed behavior. The caudal part of the striatum, or tail of the striatum (TS), defines a fourth striatal domain and acts as a crucial hub for sensory processing. Knowing the impact of stimulants on sensory processing, it is important to determine how these drugs regulate the activity of TS-Spiny Projections Neurons (SPNs) to understand their elusive functions. Recent evidence indicate that the TS displays a unique spatiomolecular organization defining distinct subdomains characterized by specific arrangement of D1- and D2-SPNs. Here, we evaluated the transcriptional regulation of several Immediate Early Genes (IEGs) induced by different doses of d-amphetamine in TS-SPNs under basal conditions and in conditional knockout (cKO) mice for the dopamine D2-autoreceptor, known to be hypersensitive to psychostimulants. Cell-specific mRNA analysis revealed that low doses of d-amphetamine elicit different regulations between induction of direct effector IEGs compared to transcription factors, depending on the TS-SPNs subtype. In addition, we showed an alteration in basal expression of transcription factors in D2-SPNs of the cKO mice. But, low doses of stimulant do not induce change in direct effector IEGs expression in neither D2-SPNs or D1-SPNs. Future experiments will determine how higher doses of d-amphetamine might hijack functional properties of D1- and D2-SPNs, in order to understand how the TS might participate in abnormal sensory processing induced by stimulants.

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