Department of Biology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, 20742, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, 20742, USA.
Brain Struct Funct. 2022 Jul;227(6):2219-2227. doi: 10.1007/s00429-022-02497-8. Epub 2022 May 2.
Dopamine plays important roles in motivational and social behaviors in mammals, and it has been implicated in several human neurological and psychiatric disorders. Rodents are used extensively as experimental models to study dopamine function in health and disease. However, interspecies differences of dopamine systems remain incompletely characterized. Here, we assessed whether the commonly referenced anatomical organization of dopamine systems in Mus musculus differs from another rodent species, Peromyscus californicus, which exhibits unique social behaviors such as biparental care. We applied tyrosine hydroxylase immunofluorescence labeling and high-throughput microscopy to establish whole-brain maps of dopamine systems in P. californicus. By comparing these maps to those from M. musculus, we identified unexpected anatomical similarity and difference between these two species. A sex difference in dopamine neurons at the anteroventral periventricular nucleus of hypothalamus, which has been implicated in regulating the maternal behaviors of the uniparental M. musculus, is similarly present in the biparental P. californicus. In contrast, major interspecies differences from M. musculus are found in the ventral midbrain and striatum of P. californicus, including the expansion of midbrain dopamine neurons into the ventral substantia nigra and the presence of an internal capsule-like white matter tract that demarcates a dorsomedial area from the rest of the striatum. These features identified in P. californicus resemble the anatomical organization of the primate brain more closely compared to those in M. musculus. Our findings suggest that P. californicus is a unique model organism for studying the evolution of dopamine systems in mammals and the disorders of dopamine systems.
多巴胺在哺乳动物的动机和社会行为中发挥着重要作用,它与人类的几种神经和精神疾病有关。啮齿动物被广泛用作实验模型,以研究多巴胺在健康和疾病中的功能。然而,多巴胺系统的种间差异仍不完全清楚。在这里,我们评估了常见的参考鼠属(Mus musculus)多巴胺系统的解剖结构是否与另一种啮齿动物加州金熊(Peromyscus californicus)不同,加州金熊表现出独特的社会行为,如双亲照顾。我们应用酪氨酸羟化酶免疫荧光标记和高通量显微镜技术,建立了加州金熊的全脑多巴胺系统图谱。通过将这些图谱与鼠属的图谱进行比较,我们发现这两个物种之间存在出乎意料的解剖相似性和差异。下丘脑腹前室旁核多巴胺神经元的性别差异与调节单亲鼠属的母性行为有关,在双亲加州金熊中也存在类似的情况。相比之下,加州金熊的中脑和纹状体与鼠属存在重大的种间差异,包括中脑多巴胺神经元扩展到腹侧黑质和存在类似于内囊的白质束,将纹状体的背内侧区域与其余部分分开。与鼠属相比,加州金熊中发现的这些特征与灵长类动物大脑的解剖结构更为相似。我们的研究结果表明,加州金熊是研究哺乳动物多巴胺系统进化和多巴胺系统紊乱的独特模式生物。