House of Mind

"Biology gives you a brain. Life turns it into a mind" - Jeffrey Eugenides

  • 26th January
    2013
  • 26
I've been looking for scholarly articles on neurotransmitters and their relations to learning, and memory. Would you be able to recommend any? Greatly appreciated.

Asked by: aebl

Mol Neurobiol. 2011 Dec;44(3):449-64. doi: 10.1007/s12035-011-8214-0. Epub 2011 Nov 11.

Serotonin and prefrontal cortex function: neurons, networks, and circuits.

Source

The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory and Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. mvpuig@mit.edu

Abstract

Higher-order executive tasks such as learning, working memory, and behavioral flexibility depend on the prefrontal cortex (PFC), the brain region most elaborated in primates. The prominent innervation by serotonin neurons and the dense expression of serotonergic receptors in the PFC suggest that serotonin is a major modulator of its function. The most abundant serotonin receptors in the PFC, 5-HT1A, 5-HT2A and 5-HT3A receptors, are selectively expressed in distinct populations of pyramidal neurons and inhibitory interneurons, and play a critical role in modulating cortical activity and neural oscillations (brain waves). Serotonergic signaling is altered in many psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia and depression, where parallel changes in receptor expression and brain waves have been observed. Furthermore, many psychiatric drug treatments target serotonergic receptors in the PFC. Thus, understanding the role of serotonergic neurotransmission in PFC function is of major clinical importance. Here, we review recent findings concerning the powerful influences of serotonin on single neurons, neural networks, and cortical circuits in the PFC of the rat, where the effects of serotonin have been most thoroughly studied.

Mol Brain. 2010 May 13;3:15. doi: 10.1186/1756-6606-3-15.

Emotional enhancement of memory: how norepinephrine enables synaptic plasticity.

Source

Department of Psychiatry, McLean Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 115 Mill Street, Belmont, Massachusetts 02478, USA. ktully@mclean.harvard.edu

Abstract

Changes in synaptic strength are believed to underlie learning and memory. We explore the idea that norepinephrine is an essential modulator of memory through its ability to regulate synaptic mechanisms. Emotional arousal leads to activation of the locus coeruleus with the subsequent release of norepineprine in the brain, resulting in the enhancement of memory. Norepinephrine activates both pre- and post-synaptic adrenergic receptors at central synapses with different functional outcomes, depending on the expression pattern of these receptors in specific neural circuitries underlying distinct behavioral processes. We review the evidence for noradrenergic modulation of synaptic plasticity with consideration of how this may contribute to the mechanisms of learning and memory.

Neuropharmacology. 2010 Jun;58(7):951-61. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2010.01.008. Epub 2010 Jan 21.

Neurotransmitter roles in synaptic modulation, plasticity and learning in the dorsal striatum.

Source

Laboratory for Integrative Neuroscience, NIAAA/NIH, 5625 Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD 20852, USA. lovindav@mail.nih.gov

Abstract

The dorsal striatum is a large forebrain region involved in action initiation, timing, control, learning and memory. Learning and remembering skilled movement sequences requires the dorsal striatum, and striatal subregions participate in both goal-directed (action-outcome) and habitual (stimulus-response) learning. Modulation of synaptic transmission plays a large part in controlling input to as well as the output from striatal medium spiny projection neurons (MSNs). Synapses in this brain region are subject to short-term modulation, including allosteric alterations in ion channel function and prominent presynaptic inhibition. Two forms of long-term synaptic plasticity have also been observed in striatum, long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD). LTP at glutamatergic synapses onto MSNs involves activation of NMDA-type glutamate receptors and D1 dopamine or A2A adenosine receptors. Expression of LTP appears to involve postsynaptic mechanisms. LTD at glutamatergic synapses involves retrograde endocannabinoid signaling stimulated by activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) and D2 dopamine receptors. While postsynaptic mechanisms participate in LTD induction, maintained expression involves presynaptic mechanisms. A similar form of LTD has also been observed at GABAergic synapses onto MSNs. Studies have just begun to examine the roles of synaptic plasticity in striatal-based learning. Findings to date indicate that molecules implicated in induction of plasticity participate in these forms of learning. Neurotransmitter receptors involved in LTP induction are necessary for proper skill and goal-directed instrumental learning. Interestingly, receptors involved in LTP and LTD at glutamatergic synapses onto MSNs of the “indirect pathway” appear to have important roles in habit learning. More work is needed to reveal if and when synaptic plasticity occurs during learning and if so what molecules and cellular processes, both short- and long-term, contribute to this plasticity.

(c) 2009. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Curr Med Chem. 2009;16(7):796-840.

Neuro-transmitters in the central nervous system & their implication in learning and memory processes.

Abstract

This review article gives an overview of a number of central neuro-transmitters, which are essential for integrating many functions in the central nervous system (CNS), such as learning, memory, sleep cycle, body movement, hormone regulation and many others. Neurons use neuro-transmitters to communicate, and a great variety of molecules are known to fit the criteria to be classified as such. A process shared by all neuro-transmitters is their release by excocytosis, and we give an outline of the molecular events and protein complexes involved in this mechanism. Synthesis, transport, inactivation, and cellular signaling can be very diverse when different neuro-transmitters are compared, and these processes are described separately for each neuro-transmitter system. Here we focus on the most well known neuro-transmitters: acetyl-choline, catechol-amines (dopamine and nor-adrenalin), indole-amine (serotonin), glutamate, and gamma-amino-butyric acid (GABA). Glutamate is the major excitatory neuro-transmitter in the brain and its actions are counter-balanced by GABA, which is the major inhibitory substance in the CNS. A balance of neuronal transmission between these two neuro-transmitters is essential to normal brain function. Acetyl-choline, serotonin and catechol-amines have a more modulatory function in the brain, being involved in many neuronal circuits. Apart from summarizing the current knowledge about the synthesis, release and receptor signaling of these transmitters, some disease states due to alteration of their normal neuro-transmission are also described.

Prog Brain Res. 2008;172:567-602. doi: 10.1016/S0079-6123(08)00927-8.

Serotonin/dopamine interaction in learning.

Source

Laboratorio de Neurofisiología Experimental, Centro de Investigación Biomédica de Michoacán, Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, Morelia, México. maesolco@yahoo.com

Abstract

Dopamine (DA)-serotonin interactions dealing with learning and memory functions have been apparent from experimental approaches over the past decade. However, since the former evidence showing that these cerebral neurotransmitter systems are involved in the regulation of the same cognitive processes, few experimental studies have been done to further clarify the nature of DA-serotonin interactions for cognitive processes sharing common brain structures. Nevertheless, a regulatory role of 5-HT/DA interactions in cognition and the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and the striatum as a neuroanatomical substrate for these DA/5-HT interactions, are now recognized. Experimental evidence indicates that pharmacological disruption of serotonin neurotransmission results in a facilitative effect on the processing of mnemonic information by cerebral regions under strong, functional DA modulation, such as the striatum and the PFC; on the other hand, increased serotonin neurotransmission appears to have a detrimental effect on cognitive functions integrated in these structures. These effects seem to occur through the interaction of different pre- and postsynaptic DA and serotonin receptor subtypes acting as opposite systems underlying cognitive abilities. Some studies, focused on DA-serotonin interactions underlying the pathophysiology of neurological and psychiatric diseases, which evolve with cognitive dysfunctions in human beings, have shown that drugs that are able to modify DA or serotonin neurotransmission may exert beneficial effects on cognitive functions, even though improvement of motor, mood and behavioural disturbances are the main objectives of pharmacological treatment of these diseases. The complete significance of DA-serotonin interactions in cognitive functions could be addressed by future experimental and clinical studies.

Hi!
I searched and found these on PubMed. The first 3 are available as free downloads. Enjoy!
  • 15th October
    2012
  • 15

Motherhood Exerts a Protective Effect Against Drug Abuse

Are you a mother? If so, research presented at SfN suggests that you are less likely to develop a drug addiction problem. Behavioral research from the Becker lab at U Michigan-Ann Arbor has shown that motherhood alters a female rat’s response to cocaine in a way that attenuates (i.e. dampens) her drug abuse liability. For example, the group found that virgin rats will not only press a lever more readily to self-administer cocaine via brain infusion, but they will also escalate (or increase their drug take) during the first week of cocaine use. In contrast, rat mothers having the maternal experience of rearing at least one litter maintain a steady level of self-administration. Moreover, virgin rats are willing to expend more energy and press the lever over 70 times to receive a single cocaine infusion, suggesting that they are willing to work harder to receive the drug even when it is challenging to obtain. 

So why do these virgin rats go crazy for cocaine? In order to answer this question, the group used microdialysis, a procedure in which a probe can be inserted into a specific brain area in order to collect extracellular fluid including neurotransmitters and metabolites, to examine cocaine-induced dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens after an injection of cocaine in virgin rats and mother rats having NO prior experience with cocaine.Using this technique, they were able to show that virgin rats release significantly more dopamine in response to cocaine than females that have had a least a litter, suggesting that the same dose of cocaine has less of an effect (i.e., is less reinforcing) female rats that have been mothers before. Thus, these data indicate that mothers are less susceptible to the effects of cocaine than virgins. 


This research was presented on October 15, 2012 by J.A. Cummings as a short talk titled: Maternal experience protects female rats against drug abuse liability. 


  • 27th May
    2011
  • 27
What is dopamine responsible for?

Asked by: Anonymous

Dopamine is implicated in many neural, cognitive and motor processes. 

Some of these include:

  • Detection of short-latency visual stimuli
  • Detection of novel/salient events and stimuli
  • Learning signal: indicates reward prediction error (discrepancy between expected outcome and actual outcome)
  • Modulation of direct/indirect motor pathways 
  • Goal-directed movement
  • Hedonic aspects of reward 
  • Reinforcing properties of drugs
  • Indirect modulation of other neurotransmitter systems
  • DA dysregulation implicated in mood disorders, psychiatric disorders and neurodegenerative diseases.
  • 3rd May
    2011
  • 03
Anatomically Distinct Dopamine Release During Anticipation and Experience of Peak Emotion to Music
Music has long been recognized as both an abstract and rewarding stimulus that produces feelings of euphoria and pleasure in many listeners.  Music may also elicit emotional responses from listeners and alter affective states. While music has been present across multiple cultures and societies throughout time, the experience of pleasure while listening to music is highly specific, personal and subjective. In a study featured in Nature Neuroscience last February, Salimpoor and others set out to study what goes on in the brain of individuals while they listened to enjoyable/pleasurable music. 
For the study, subjects were asked to bring their own pleasurable music, and the other subjects’ music was used as neutral music for comparison. Dopamine release while listening to music was estimated indirectly by using ligand-based positron emission tomography (PET) scan in which 11C raclopride, a radioactively labeled ligand, competes with endogenous dopamine for D2 receptor binding. The assumption is that if brain areas are experiencing surges of dopamine release, they binding capacity of 11C raclopride will decrease in these areas. The experience of feeling chills, a marker of peak emotional responses to music, was self-reported by the subjects. In addition, psychophysiological measurements (i.e. respiration rate, heart rate, skin conductance, temperature) were also conducted while the subjects listened to music while undergoing PET scanning. 
PET scanning revealed changes in 11C raclopride binding in the striatum, specifically in the right caudate and the right nucleus accumbens. There was also a significant positive correlation between reports of chills and feelings of overall pleasure, perhaps indicating that chills may serve as an objective measure of pleasure while listening to music. The experience of overall greater pleasure while music listening was also correlated with greater autonomic nervous system arousal, as indexed by changes in psychophysiological measurements. 
To assess the temporal dynamics in dopamine release, the group employed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while subjects listened to neutral or pleasurable music. Subjects were asked to press a button whenever they felt chills (typically during pleasurable moments), and the 15s prior to the pressing of the button, which indicated chills + pleasure, were denoted as the anticipation window. Thus, dopamine release was studied in two different time periods: anticipation period (15s before reported pleasure and chills), and peak response (chills/pleasure). 
When the fMRI scans were conjoined with the PET masks, the group was able to identify a temporally mediated BOLD response in the right side of dorsal (caudate) and ventral (nucleus accumbens) striatum that corresponded with anticipation epochs and peak experience, respectively. Moreover, as demonstrated above, behavioral measures like the number of reported chills were more correlated with 11C raclopride binding changes in the right caudate while intensity of chills and overall degree of reported pleasure were more significantly correlated with changes in 11C raclopride binding potential in the right nucleus accumbens. 
In summary, the experience of pleasure while listening to music acts on the brain similarly to other rewards like food, sex and drugs. Listening to pleasurable music targets striatal areas associated with mesolimbic reward circuitry and dopaminergic neurotransmission. 
Source:
 
Salimpoor, et al. 2011. Anatomically Distinct Dopamine Release During Anticipation and Experience of Peak Emotion to Music. Nature Neuroscience. doi:10.1038/nn.2726

Anatomically Distinct Dopamine Release During Anticipation and Experience of Peak Emotion to Music

Music has long been recognized as both an abstract and rewarding stimulus that produces feelings of euphoria and pleasure in many listeners.  Music may also elicit emotional responses from listeners and alter affective states. While music has been present across multiple cultures and societies throughout time, the experience of pleasure while listening to music is highly specific, personal and subjective. In a study featured in Nature Neuroscience last February, Salimpoor and others set out to study what goes on in the brain of individuals while they listened to enjoyable/pleasurable music. 

For the study, subjects were asked to bring their own pleasurable music, and the other subjects’ music was used as neutral music for comparison. Dopamine release while listening to music was estimated indirectly by using ligand-based positron emission tomography (PET) scan in which 11C raclopride, a radioactively labeled ligand, competes with endogenous dopamine for D2 receptor binding. The assumption is that if brain areas are experiencing surges of dopamine release, they binding capacity of 11C raclopride will decrease in these areas. The experience of feeling chills, a marker of peak emotional responses to music, was self-reported by the subjects. In addition, psychophysiological measurements (i.e. respiration rate, heart rate, skin conductance, temperature) were also conducted while the subjects listened to music while undergoing PET scanning. 

PET scanning revealed changes in 11C raclopride binding in the striatum, specifically in the right caudate and the right nucleus accumbens. There was also a significant positive correlation between reports of chills and feelings of overall pleasure, perhaps indicating that chills may serve as an objective measure of pleasure while listening to music. The experience of overall greater pleasure while music listening was also correlated with greater autonomic nervous system arousal, as indexed by changes in psychophysiological measurements. 

To assess the temporal dynamics in dopamine release, the group employed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while subjects listened to neutral or pleasurable music. Subjects were asked to press a button whenever they felt chills (typically during pleasurable moments), and the 15s prior to the pressing of the button, which indicated chills + pleasure, were denoted as the anticipation window. Thus, dopamine release was studied in two different time periods: anticipation period (15s before reported pleasure and chills), and peak response (chills/pleasure).

When the fMRI scans were conjoined with the PET masks, the group was able to identify a temporally mediated BOLD response in the right side of dorsal (caudate) and ventral (nucleus accumbens) striatum that corresponded with anticipation epochs and peak experience, respectively. Moreover, as demonstrated above, behavioral measures like the number of reported chills were more correlated with 11C raclopride binding changes in the right caudate while intensity of chills and overall degree of reported pleasure were more significantly correlated with changes in 11C raclopride binding potential in the right nucleus accumbens. 

In summary, the experience of pleasure while listening to music acts on the brain similarly to other rewards like food, sex and drugs. Listening to pleasurable music targets striatal areas associated with mesolimbic reward circuitry and dopaminergic neurotransmission. 

Source:

Salimpoor, et al. 2011. Anatomically Distinct Dopamine Release During Anticipation and Experience of Peak Emotion to Music. Nature Neurosciencedoi:10.1038/nn.2726


  • 31st January
    2011
  • 31