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  4. A fluorescent nanosensor paint reveals the heterogeneity of dopamine release from neurons at individual release sites
 
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2021
Paper (Preprint, Research Paper, Review Paper, White Paper, etc.)
Title

A fluorescent nanosensor paint reveals the heterogeneity of dopamine release from neurons at individual release sites

Title Supplement
Published on bioRxiv - the preprint server for biology
Abstract
The neurotransmitter dopamine is released from discrete axonal structures called varicosities. Its release is essential in behaviour and is critically implicated in prevalent neuropsychiatric diseases. Existing dopamine detection methods are not able to detect and distinguish discrete dopamine release events from multiple varicosities. This prevents an understanding of how dopamine release is regulated across populations of discrete varicosities. Using a near infrared fluorescent (980 nm) dopamine nanosensor 'paint' (AndromeDA), we show that action potential-evoked dopamine release is highly heterogeneous across release sites and also requires molecular priming. Using AndromeDA, we visualize dopamine release at up to 100 dopaminergic varicosities simultaneously within a single imaging field with high temporal resolution (15 images/s). We find that 'hotspots' of dopamine release are highly heterogeneous and are detected at only ~17% of all varicosities. In neurons lacking Munc13 proteins, which prime synaptic vesicles, dopamine release is abolished during electrical stimulation, demonstrating that dopamine release requires vesicle priming. In summary, AndromeDA reveals the spatiotemporal organization of dopamine release.
Author(s)
Elizarova, Sofia
Max Planck EM
Chouaib, Abed
Uni des Saarlandes / CIPMM
Shaib, Ali
Max Planck EM ; Uni Göttingen / Institut für Neuro- und Sinnesphysiologie
Mann, Florian
Uni Göttingen / IPC
Brose, Nils
Max Planck EM
Kruss, Sebastian  
Uni Göttingen IPC / Uni Bochum Phys. Chemie II
Daniel, James A.
Max Planck EM
Project(s)
SYNPRIME
MBExC
RESOLV
Funder
European Research Council ERC
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG  
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG  
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG  
Open Access
DOI
10.1101/2021.03.28.437019
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Mikroelektronische Schaltungen und Systeme IMS  
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