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Dopamine elevates and lowers astroglial Ca 2+ through distinct pathways depending on local synaptic circuitry
Author(s) -
Jennings Alistair,
Tyurikova Olga,
Bard Lucie,
Zheng Kaiyu,
Semyanov Alexey,
Henneberger Christian,
Rusakov Dmitri A.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
glia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.954
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1098-1136
pISSN - 0894-1491
DOI - 10.1002/glia.23103
Subject(s) - dopamine , biology , neurotransmitter , neuroscience , dopamine receptor , dopamine receptor d2 , inhibitory postsynaptic potential , dopaminergic , astrocyte , receptor , central nervous system , biochemistry
Whilst astrocytes in culture invariably respond to dopamine with cytosolic Ca 2+ rises, the dopamine sensitivity of astroglia in situ and its physiological roles remain unknown. To minimize effects of experimental manipulations on astroglial physiology, here we monitored Ca 2+ in cells connected via gap junctions to astrocytes loaded whole‐cell with cytosolic indicators in area CA1 of acute hippocampal slices. Aiming at high sensitivity of [Ca 2+ ] measurements, we also employed life‐time imaging of the Ca 2+ indicator Oregon Green BAPTA‐1. We found that dopamine triggered a dose‐dependent, bidirectional Ca 2+ response in stratum radiatum astroglia, a jagged elevation accompanied and followed by below‐baseline decreases. The elevation depended on D1/D2 receptors and engaged intracellular Ca 2+ storage and removal whereas the dopamine‐induced [Ca 2+ ] decrease involved D2 receptors only and was sensitive to Ca 2+ channel blockade. In contrast, the stratum lacunosum moleculare astroglia generated higher‐threshold dopamine‐induced Ca 2+ responses which did not depend on dopamine receptors and were uncoupled from the prominent inhibitory action of dopamine on local perforant path synapses. Our findings thus suggest that a single neurotransmitter—dopamine—could either elevate or decrease astrocyte [Ca 2+ ] depending on the receptors involved, that such actions are specific to the regional neural circuitry and that they may be causally uncoupled from dopamine actions on local synapses. The results also indicate that [Ca 2+ ] elevations commonly detected in astroglia can represent the variety of distinct mechanisms acting on the microscopic scale. GLIA 2017;65:447–459
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