Mallet Nicolas, Pogosyan Alek, Sharott Andrew, Csicsvari Jozsef, Bolam J Paul, Brown Peter, Magill Peter J
Medical Research Council Anatomical Neuropharmacology Unit, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3TH, United Kingdom.
J Neurosci. 2008 Apr 30;28(18):4795-806. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0123-08.2008.
In the subthalamic nucleus (STN) of Parkinson's disease (PD) patients, a pronounced synchronization of oscillatory activity at beta frequencies (15-30 Hz) accompanies movement difficulties. Abnormal beta oscillations and motor symptoms are concomitantly and acutely suppressed by dopaminergic therapies, suggesting that these inappropriate rhythms might also emerge acutely from disrupted dopamine transmission. The neural basis of these abnormal beta oscillations is unclear, and how they might compromise information processing, or how they arise, is unknown. Using a 6-hydroxydopamine-lesioned rodent model of PD, we demonstrate that beta oscillations are inappropriately exaggerated, compared with controls, in a brain-state-dependent manner after chronic dopamine loss. Exaggerated beta oscillations are expressed at the levels of single neurons and small neuronal ensembles, and are focally present and spatially distributed within STN. They are also expressed in synchronous population activities, as evinced by oscillatory local field potentials, in STN and cortex. Excessively synchronized beta oscillations reduce the information coding capacity of STN neuronal ensembles, which may contribute to parkinsonian motor impairment. Acute disruption of dopamine transmission in control animals with antagonists of D(1)/D(2) receptors did not exaggerate STN or cortical beta oscillations. Moreover, beta oscillations were not exaggerated until several days after 6-hydroxydopamine injections. Thus, contrary to predictions, abnormally amplified beta oscillations in cortico-STN circuits do not result simply from an acute absence of dopamine receptor stimulation, but are instead delayed sequelae of chronic dopamine depletion. Targeting the plastic processes underlying the delayed emergence of pathological beta oscillations after continuing dopaminergic dysfunction may offer considerable therapeutic promise.
在帕金森病(PD)患者的丘脑底核(STN)中,β频率(15 - 30Hz)的振荡活动明显同步,伴有运动困难。多巴胺能疗法可同时并迅速抑制异常的β振荡和运动症状,这表明这些不适当的节律也可能因多巴胺传递中断而急性出现。这些异常β振荡的神经基础尚不清楚,它们如何损害信息处理,或者它们是如何产生的,目前也未知。使用6 - 羟基多巴胺损伤的PD啮齿动物模型,我们证明,与对照组相比,在慢性多巴胺缺失后,β振荡以脑状态依赖的方式被不恰当地放大。放大的β振荡在单个神经元和小神经元群水平上表达,并在STN内局部存在且呈空间分布。它们也在同步的群体活动中表达,如STN和皮层中振荡的局部场电位所示。过度同步的β振荡会降低STN神经元群的信息编码能力,这可能导致帕金森病运动障碍。用D(1)/D(2)受体拮抗剂急性破坏对照动物的多巴胺传递,并不会放大STN或皮层的β振荡。此外,在注射6 - 羟基多巴胺几天后β振荡才会被放大。因此,与预测相反,皮质 - STN回路中异常放大的β振荡并非仅仅由多巴胺受体刺激的急性缺失导致,而是慢性多巴胺耗竭的延迟后遗症。针对持续多巴胺能功能障碍后病理性β振荡延迟出现的可塑性过程进行干预,可能具有可观的治疗前景。