Computational modelling identifies key determinants of subregion-specific dopamine dynamics in the striatum

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Abstract

Striatal dopamine (DA) release regulates reward-related learning and motivation and is believed to consist of a short-lived phasic and continuous tonic component. Here, we build a large-scale three-dimensional model of extracellular DA dynamics in dorsal (DS) and ventral striatum (VS). The model predicts rapid dynamics in DS with little-to-no basal DA, and slower dynamics in the VS enabling build-up of tonic DA levels. These regional differences do not reflect release-related phenomena but rather differential dopamine transporter (DAT) activity. Interestingly, our simulations posit DAT nanoclustering as a possible regulator of this activity. Receptor binding simulations show that D1 receptor occupancy follows extracellular DA concentration with milliseconds delay, while D2 receptors do not respond to brief pauses in firing but rather integrate DA signal over seconds. Summarized, our model distills recent experimental observations into a computational framework that challenge prevailing paradigms of striatal DA signalling.

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