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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 1 July 2002, pp. 487-496
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Neurophysiological Pharmacology Section, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Ruskin, David N.,
Debra A. Bergstrom, and
Judith R. Walters.
Nigrostriatal Lesion and Dopamine Agonists Affect Firing Patterns
of Rodent Entopeduncular Nucleus Neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 487-496, 2002. Altered activity
of the entopeduncular nucleus, the rodent homologue of the globus
pallidus internal segment in primates, is thought to mediate behavioral
consequences of midbrain dopamine depletion in rodents. Few studies,
however, have examined dopaminergic modulation of spiking activity in
this nucleus. This study characterizes changes in entopeduncular
neuronal activity after nigrostriatal dopaminergic lesion and the
effects of systemic treatment with selective D1
(SKF 38393) and D2 (quinpirole) agonists in
lesioned rats. Extracellular single-unit recordings were performed in
awake immobilized rats, either in neurologically intact animals
(n = 42) or in animals that had received unilateral
6-hydroxydopamine infusion into the medial forebrain bundle several
weeks previously (n = 35). Nigrostriatal lesion altered
baseline activity of entopeduncular neurons in several ways. Interspike
interval distributions had significantly decreased modes and
significantly increased coefficient of variation, skewness and
kurtosis; yet interspike interval mean (the inverse of firing rate) was
not affected. Also, spectral analysis of autocorrelograms indicated
that lesion significantly reduced the incidence of regular-spiking
neurons and increased the incidence of neurons with 4-18 Hz
oscillations. Dopamine agonist treatment reversed some lesion-induced
effects: quinpirole reversed changes in interspike interval
distribution mode and coefficient of variation, while combined
quinpirole and SKF 38393 blocked the appearance of 4-18 Hz
oscillations. However, no agonist treatment normalized all aspects of
entopeduncular activity. Additionally, inhibition of firing rates by
D1 or combined
D1/D2 receptor activation indicated that dopamine agonists affected the overall level of entopeduncular activity in a manner similar to that found in the substantia nigra pars reticulata and globus pallidus internal segment
after dopamine neuron lesion. These data demonstrate that lesion of the
nigrostriatal tract leads to modifications of several aspects of firing
pattern in the rodent entopeduncular nucleus and so expand on similar
findings in the rodent substantia nigra pars reticulata and in the
globus pallidus internal segment in humans and nonhuman primates. The
results support the view that dysfunction in the basal ganglia after
midbrain dopamine neuron loss relates more consistently to abnormal
activity patterns than to net changes in firing rate in the basal
ganglia output nuclei, while overall decreases in firing rate in these
structures may play a more important role in adverse motor reactions to
dopamine agonist treatments.
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