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Page 1: Cellular, Behavioral, and Computational Investigations of Dopamine Modulation of Prefrontal Cortical Networks Jeremy Seamans.

Cellular, Behavioral, and Computational Investigationsof Dopamine Modulation of Prefrontal Cortical Networks

Jeremy Seamans

Page 2: Cellular, Behavioral, and Computational Investigations of Dopamine Modulation of Prefrontal Cortical Networks Jeremy Seamans.

Schizophrenic Syndrome

• Positive Symptoms (delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, and grossly disorganized or abnormal thinking and behavior)

• Negative Symptoms (affective flattening, alogia, and avolition, social withdrawl)

• Cognitive Symptoms (distractability, loss of flexible control of behavior).

“Cognitive impairment in schizophrenia is the core of the disorder.”

-Elvevag & Goldberg 2000

“Long term prognosis for individuals with schizophrenia appears to be best predicted, not by the severity of positive symptoms, but the degree of cognitive impairment”

-Lewis & Lieberman 2000

Page 3: Cellular, Behavioral, and Computational Investigations of Dopamine Modulation of Prefrontal Cortical Networks Jeremy Seamans.

Schizophrenic Syndrome=Attentional Syndrome

As early as the 1900s Kraeplin noted that the more debilitating symptoms of schizophrenia, are disturbances in attention and cognition

“Attentional deficits in schizophrenia may be a principal cause of various deficits in higher order cognitive functions...Distractability interferes with the organizational aspects of memory”

-Kenny & Meltzer 1991

“Schizophrenic patients present deficits...which depend on the executive attention network.”

-Fuentes 2001

• Cognitive Symptoms = Dysfunction of executive attention (flexible control of behavior).

• Positive Symptoms - Dysfunction of attention within thought/perception

• Negative Symptoms - Dysfunction of emotional attention.

Page 4: Cellular, Behavioral, and Computational Investigations of Dopamine Modulation of Prefrontal Cortical Networks Jeremy Seamans.

The Prefrontal/Dopamine link• Altered release proteins, interneuron as well as altered dopamine receptor

function in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) of schizophrenics.

• Patients with PFC damage exhibit similar problems to schizophrenics

• Schizophrenics are unable to activate PFC on cognitive tasks

• This inactivity can be reversed by a dopamine agonist

• D2 receptor affinity REQUIRED for antipsychotic efficacy while dopamine agonists can induce psychotic symptoms

• Clozapine produces high levels of D2 occupancy in cortex (relative to striatum) while chronic treatment upregulates cortical D2 receptors and downregulates D1 receptors.

• Clozapine and other antipsychotics upregulate cortical dopamine turnover.

Therefore schizophrenics exhibit a dysfunction in PFC dopamine systems that can be reversed by antipsychotics

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How does dopamine regulate network representations in PFC?

• Behavioral approach: What is dopamine doing functionally?

• Electrophysiological approach: What are the mechanisms involved in this dopamine regulation?

• Computational approach: How do the mechanisms relate to function?

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Behavioral analyses of dopamine regulation of PFC dependent

cognitive processes

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Adapted from: Sawaguchi et al. (1986; 1988; 1990a,b)

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Dopamine regulation of PFC neurons:Physiological action of dopamine in vitro

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Summary of the Physiological Effects of Dopamine

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D1 receptor activation enhances evoked firing by shifting INAP activation

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D1 receptor activation increases NMDA EPSCs selectively

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Dopamine has bi-directional effects on IPSCs

D2 D1

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D2-mediated reduction of IPSCs is blocked by a muscarinic acetylcholine antagonist (Atropine)

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Summary of the Physiological Effects of Dopamine

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Linking cellular mechanisms to the functions of dopamine in the PFC

Computational Modeling

(Daniel Durstewitz)

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Simulation of D1 effects leads to reduction in spontaneous but large enhancement in evoked “delay-period” activity

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SupervisorsAnthony Phillips (UBC)

Charles Yang (UBC, Lilly Research Labs. )

Natalia Gorelova (UBC)

Terry Sejnowski (Salk Institute)

Charles Stevens (Salk Institute)

CollaboratorsStan Floresco (UBC)

Daniel Durstewitz (Salk Institute)


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