2016
DOI: 10.1111/adb.12462
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Cocaine‐induced synaptic structural modification is differentially regulated by dopamine D1 and D3 receptors‐mediated signaling pathways

Abstract: Synaptic plasticity plays a critical role in cocaine addiction. The dopamine D1 and D3 receptors differentially regulate the cocaine-induced gene expression, structural remodeling and behavioral response. However, how these two receptors coordinately mediate the ultra-structural changes of synapses after cocaine exposure and whether these changes are behaviorally relevant are still not clear. Here, using quantitative electron microscopy, we show that D1 and D3 receptors have distinct roles in regulating cocain… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…However, when the dose of SCH23390 was increased ten-fold, the D3R antagonist was rendered ineffective, probably because the level of D1-like receptor signaling was no longer sufficient to increase locomotor output. Our electrophysiological and behavioral studies are uniformly consistent with the hypothesis that D3R antagonism renders NAc D1-MSNs hyperresponsive to DA-induced excitation, and also provide mechanistic evidence as to how D3R antagonism functionally enhances the behavioral, cellular, and neurochemical effects of cocaine observed herein and previously by others (38,41,44,74,89,90).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…However, when the dose of SCH23390 was increased ten-fold, the D3R antagonist was rendered ineffective, probably because the level of D1-like receptor signaling was no longer sufficient to increase locomotor output. Our electrophysiological and behavioral studies are uniformly consistent with the hypothesis that D3R antagonism renders NAc D1-MSNs hyperresponsive to DA-induced excitation, and also provide mechanistic evidence as to how D3R antagonism functionally enhances the behavioral, cellular, and neurochemical effects of cocaine observed herein and previously by others (38,41,44,74,89,90).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…Pyk2 knockout does not alter cocaine-induced conditioned place preference. We then evaluated in Pyk2 mutant mice the rewarding properties of cocaine, which involve D1R [45][46][47] . We measured cocaine-induced CPP in wild-type and mutant mice (Fig.…”
Section: Cmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We then evaluated the rewarding properties of cocaine in Pyk2 mutant mice, which involve D1 receptors [41][42][43]. We measured cocaine-CPP in wild-type and mutant mice ( Figure S7).…”
Section: Pyk2 Knockout Has Minor Effects On Cocaine-induced Signalingmentioning
confidence: 99%