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Kim, Jae-Ick
Neural Circuit and Neurodegenerative Disease Lab.
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Distinct modes of dopamine modulation on striatopallidal synaptic transmission

Author(s)
Lee, YoungeunReva, MariaKim, Ki JungKim, YeminCho, EunjeongKim, Hyun-JinJeong, MinseokMyung, KyungjaeLi, YulongLee, Seung EunLee, C. JustinLuscher, ChristianKim, Jae-Ick
Issued Date
2025-11-19
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/89284
Citation
The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) Annual Meeting 2025 (Neuroscience 2025)
Abstract
Dopamine (DA) plays a crucial role in voluntary movement by modulating basal
ganglia function. According to the classical model, DA depletion leads to overactivation of the
indirect pathway, excessive thalamic inhibition, and ultimately hypokinesia. Although the
striatopallidal synapse—linking the striatum to the external globus pallidus (GPe)—is a key node
in this pathway, its dopaminergic modulation remains poorly understood due to sparse DA
innervation.
To address this, we combined projection-specific optogenetics, whole-cell patch-clamp
recordings in acute mouse brain slices, and computational modeling. We found that DA exerts
region-specific effects through D2 and D4 receptors in the GPe. In dorsolateral (DL) and
ventromedial (VM) GPe, D2 receptors mediate presynaptic inhibition by increasing paired-pulse
ratio (PPR) and reducing GABA release. In contrast, in dorsomedial (DM) and ventrolateral
(VL) GPe, D4 receptors mediate postsynaptic inhibition without affecting PPR. This reveals a
spatially organized, pinwheel-like pattern of DA signaling across GPe subregions. Following 6-
hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA)-induced DA depletion, this spatial pattern reverses: PPR increases
in the VL and DM while diminishing in the DL and VM.
Together, our findings demonstrate that striatopallidal synapses are spatially organized and
differentially modulated by dopamine across GPe subregions. This structured dopaminergic
modulation enables selective gating of indirect pathway signals and may contribute to regionspecific
dysfunctions in Parkinsonian states. Understanding this spatial logic provides new
insight into the functional architecture and pathological vulnerability of basal ganglia circuits.
Publisher
Society for Neuroscience

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