Adaptive Behaviour Research Group, Department of Psychology, University of Sheffield Sheffield, UK.
Front Comput Neurosci. 2009 Nov 26;3:26. doi: 10.3389/neuro.10.026.2009. eCollection 2009.
Loss of dopamine from the striatum can cause both profound motor deficits, as in Parkinson's disease, and disrupt learning. Yet the effect of dopamine on striatal neurons remains a complex and controversial topic, and is in need of a comprehensive framework. We extend a reduced model of the striatal medium spiny neuron (MSN) to account for dopaminergic modulation of its intrinsic ion channels and synaptic inputs. We tune our D1 and D2 receptor MSN models using data from a recent large-scale compartmental model. The new models capture the input-output relationships for both current injection and spiking input with remarkable accuracy, despite the order of magnitude decrease in system size. They also capture the paired pulse facilitation shown by MSNs. Our dopamine models predict that synaptic effects dominate intrinsic effects for all levels of D1 and D2 receptor activation. We analytically derive a full set of equilibrium points and their stability for the original and dopamine modulated forms of the MSN model. We find that the stability types are not changed by dopamine activation, and our models predict that the MSN is never bistable. Nonetheless, the MSN models can produce a spontaneously bimodal membrane potential similar to that recently observed in vitro following application of NMDA agonists. We demonstrate that this bimodality is created by modelling the agonist effects as slow, irregular and massive jumps in NMDA conductance and, rather than a form of bistability, is due to the voltage-dependent blockade of NMDA receptors. Our models also predict a more pronounced membrane potential bimodality following D1 receptor activation. This work thus establishes reduced yet accurate dopamine-modulated models of MSNs, suitable for use in large-scale models of the striatum. More importantly, these provide a tractable framework for further study of dopamine's effects on computation by individual neurons.
纹状体中多巴胺的丧失会导致严重的运动缺陷,如帕金森病,并破坏学习能力。然而,多巴胺对纹状体神经元的影响仍然是一个复杂且有争议的话题,需要一个全面的框架。我们扩展了纹状体中间神经元(MSN)的简化模型,以解释其内在离子通道和突触输入的多巴胺调制。我们使用最近大规模分区模型的数据来调整我们的 D1 和 D2 受体 MSN 模型。尽管系统规模减小了一个数量级,但新模型仍能非常准确地捕捉到电流注入和尖峰输入的输入-输出关系。它们还捕捉到 MSN 显示的成对脉冲易化。我们的多巴胺模型预测,对于所有 D1 和 D2 受体激活水平,突触效应都主导内在效应。我们从原始和多巴胺调制的 MSN 模型的完整集合的平衡点及其稳定性进行了分析推导。我们发现,多巴胺激活不会改变稳定性类型,我们的模型预测 MSN 永远不会双稳态。尽管如此,MSN 模型仍然可以产生类似于最近在 NMDA 激动剂应用后体外观察到的自发双模态膜电位。我们证明,这种双峰性是通过将激动剂效应建模为 NMDA 电导的缓慢、不规则和大规模跳跃产生的,而不是双稳态的一种形式,这是由于 NMDA 受体的电压依赖性阻断。我们的模型还预测 D1 受体激活后膜电位双峰性更为明显。因此,这项工作建立了简化但准确的多巴胺调制 MSN 模型,适合用于纹状体的大规模模型。更重要的是,这些为进一步研究多巴胺对单个神经元计算的影响提供了一个易于处理的框架。