1. Non‐motor Function of the Midbrain Dopaminergic Neurons
- Author
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Edmar Miyoshi, Maria A.B.F. Vital, Patrícia A. Dombrowski, Suelen Lucio Boschen, Lucélia Mendes dos Santos, Roseli Boerngen-Lacerda, Claudio Da Cunha, Mariza Bortolanza, Roberto Andreatini, and Evellyn Claudia Wietzikoski
- Subjects
Parkinson's disease ,Dopaminergic ,Ventral striatum ,Nigrostriatal pathway ,Striatum ,Stimulus (physiology) ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Dopamine ,Basal ganglia ,medicine ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The roles of the nigrostriatal pathway are far beyond the simple control of motor functions. The tonic release of dopamine in the dorsal and ventral striatum controls the choice of proper actions toward a given environmental situation. In the striatum, a specific action is triggered by a specific stimulus associated with it. When the subject faces a novel and salient stimulus, the phasic release of dopamine allows synaptic plasticity in the cortico-striatal synapses. Neurons of different regions of cortical areas make synapses that converge to the same medium spine neurons of the striatum. The convergent associations form functional units encoding body parts, objects, locations, and symbolic representations of the subject’s world. Such units emerge in the striatum in a repetitive manner, like a mosaic of broken mirrors. The phasic release of dopamine allows the association of units to encode an action of the subject directed to an object or location with the outcome of this action. Reinforced stimulus-action-outcome associations will affect future decision making when the same stimulus (object, location, idea) is presented to the subject in the future. In the absence of a minimal amount of striatal dopamine, no action is initiated as seen in Parkinson’s disease subjects. The abnormal and improper association of these units leads to the initiation of unpurposeful and sometimes repetitive actions, as those observed in dyskinetic patients. The association of an excessive reinforcement of some actions, like drug consumption, leads to drug addiction. Improper associations of ideas and unpleasant outcomes may be related to traumatic and depressive symptoms common in many diseases, including Parkinson’s disease. The same can be said about the learning and memory impairments observed in demented and nondemented Parkinson’s disease patients.
- Published
- 2009
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