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March 27, 2023 by ktangen

Basal Ganglia

dance

 

UU

Slide7

 

Hhhh

General Info

Neural clusters in peripheral nervous system are ganglia. In the central nervous system, they are called nuclei. Should be called Basal Nuclei but usually called Basal Ganglia.

Works on disinhibition principle

It’s the brain’s brake

If no input = steady fire at high rates

Neurotransmitters

Inputs use glutamate

Outputs use  GABA

Internal connections use dopamine or ACh

Group of nuclei

Distinct masses of gray matter

Left-right sides mirror each other

Work together as functional unit

Interact with cortex, thalamus, etc

 

FOUR PARTS

Striatum

Dorsal

caudate & putamen

Ventral

nucleus accumbens & olfactory

Pallidum

globus pallidus (dorsal)

ventral pallidum

Substantia nigra (pons)

Subthalamic nucleus (below thalamus)

 

Two large parts

Striatum & Pallidum

Two smaller parts (& farther back)

Substantia Nigra & Subthalamic

 

Disorders

Huntington’s disease

Major loss of medium spiny neurons in striatum

Inability to prevent parts of the body from moving unintentionally

 

  1. Striatum

Largest

Looks striped

Looks like two blobs of gray separated by large white stripe

input from many brain areas

only outputs to other parts of basal ganglia

Complex internal organization

Direct pathway (D1)

Indirect (D2)

Organized in 3D

Cortex is layered; organized 2D

Coordinates multiple aspects of cognition

action planning

decision making

motivation

reinforcement

reward

 

Interneurons

Release acetylcholine

Many types of interneurons

include fast-spiking interneurons

Continuously produce new neurons in striatum

 

Striatum is activated by stimuli associated with reward

aversive

novel & unexpected

intense stimuli

 

Ventral striatum composed of olfactory tubercle & nucleus accumbens

As a whole, major role in cognitive processing of

aversion & pleasure

motivation

reward & reinforcement

addiction

As a whole, minor role

cognitive processing of:

fear (type of aversion)

impulsivity

placebo effect

Also involved in

encoding of new motor skills

Nucleus accumbens

Two, one in each hemisphere

Each has two structures:

Nucleus accumbens core

Increased density of dendritic spines

Increased branch segments

Increased terminal segments

Processes

motor function related to reward

encodes new motor programs that help get future rewards

Nucleus accumbens shell

Lower density of dendritic spines

Less terminal segments

Less branch segments

Processes

want (motivational salience)

reward perception

positive reinforcement

drugs & naturally rewarding stimuli

addictive drugs affect dopamine in shell more than core

Function

Reward

Subset of VTA neurons

Dopamine (D1) medium spiny neurons in shell

Drugs

Increase dopamine in shell & core; more pronounced in shell

morphine

cocaine

amphetamines

at high levels, increase dopamine level to similar levels in both shell & core

Drug rewards

has abnormal strengthening effect on stimulus

drug associations

increases drug-reward stimuli’s resistance to extinction

effect was more pronounced in shell than core

Addiction

Links to addictions to

alcohol, cannabinoids, cocaine

nicotine, opioids & amphetamines

Links to

Depression

OCD

Placebo effect

 

 

 

 

  1. Pallidum

Input from striatum

Sends inhibitory output to a number of motor-related areas

Globus Pallidus

Latin for “pale globe“

AKA,  paleostriatum or dorsal pallidum

Output to substantia nigra

Very large neurons

Very large dendritic arbors

3-dimensional shape of flat discs

Involved in plan & inhibit move

regulation of voluntary movement

regulate subconscious movements

If damaged, can cause movement disorders

Balances excitatory action of cerebellum

allow people to move smoothly

even & controlled movements

 

  1. Substantia Nigra

Located in pons

Important role in reward, addiction &  movement

Latin for black substance

due to high levels of neuromelanin found in dopaminergic neurons

Discovered in 1784

Largest nucleus in midbrain

Two substantiae nigrae; one on each side

Function

eye movement

motor planning

reward-seeking

learning

addiction

Mediated thru striatum

Co-dependence between striatum & substantia nigra

Looks like a continuous band

Two parts with very different connections and functions:

  1. Pars Compacta

Supplies striatum with dopamine

Heavily involved in learned responses to stimuli

Activity increases when new $ is presented

Partial dopamine deficits do not affect motor control

Can lead to disturbances in the sleep-wake cycle

Especially in hippocampus
Parkinson’s

Neurodegenerative disease

tremor, stiffness, akinesia

bradykinesia, fatigue, depression

Death of dopaminergic neurons in pars compacta

Impacts motivation

Hunger fails to initiate movements

“Paralysis of will”

kinesia paradoxica

Moves easily in emergency

Immobile after issue passed

Animal with severe basal ganglia damage won’t move toward food

Even if placed within inches

Chew & swallow if put in mouth

Why neurons die is unknown

unique susceptibility?

abnormalities in mitochondrial?

result in abnormal protein handling and neuron death

Dopaminergic neurons in pars compacta contain less calbindin

protein involved in calcium ion transport within cells

excess calcium in cells is toxic

Plasticity of pars compacta is robust

no symptoms until 50-80% of pars compacta dopaminergic neurons have died

  1. Pars Reticulata

output to rest of brain

spontaneously fire action potentials

inhibits targets of basal ganglia

decreases in inhibition are associated with movement

Parkinson’s and epilepsy

Altered patterns of firing

single-spike

burst firing

   Schizophrenia

Patients have increased levels of dopamine

dopamine antagonists remain a standard and successful treatment for schizophrenia

Substantia nigra’s pars compacta

reduction in synaptic terminal size

more active NMDA receptors

reduced dysbindin expression

 

   Wooden Chest Syndrome

aka, fentanyl chest wall rigidity syndrome

rare side effect of synthetic opioids (ie Fentanyl)

generalized increase in skeletal muscle tone

increased dopamine release and decreased GABA release in substatia nigra/striatum

most pronounced on chest wall muscles

leads to impaired ventilation

most common in anesthesia where rapid and high doses given intravenously

 

   Cocaine

inhibition of dopamine reuptake

cocaine is more active in VTA than substantia nigra

increases metabolism in substantia nigra

altered motor function

also inhibits spontaneous firing by the pars compacta

inactivation of substantia nigra as treatment for cocaine addiction?

 

  1. Subthalamic nucleus (also called Luys’ Body)

Input from striatum & cerebral cortex

Output to the globus pallidus

Small lens-shaped nucleus; major part of subthalamus

Functionally part of basal ganglia

Location

ventral to thalamus

dorsal to  substantia nigra

medial to internal capsule

Discovered 1865, by Jules Luys

Structure

long sparsely-spiny dendrites

elliptical dendritic arbors

Spontaneously firing cells

Pace-maker of the brain?

Oscillatory and synchronous activity

Stimulated to treat Parkinson’s

causes nearby astrocytes to release ATP

precursor to adenosine

catabolic process

Damage

small vessel stroke in patients with diabetes, hypertension, or a history of smoking

produces hemibaliismus

uncontrollable flinging movements of arms and legs

Functions

impulse control

OCD cause?

action selection?

 

Basal ganglia all work together

Impacts

Eye movements

Action selection

Voluntary motor control

Inhibits motor systems

Procedural learning

Eye movements

Habits

Lots of brain regions work

 

 

Basal ganglia impacts implicit learning

Action selection?

Which behavior to do when?

Parkinson’s

Cerebral palsy

Damage to basal ganglia during 2nd and 3rd trimester

Foreign accent syndrome

Some combination of problems in cerebellum, Broca’s area & basal ganglion

Caused by stroke or injury

Mispronunciation of words

Listener’s hear it as accent

Not new vocabulary

Sufferer’s may imitate other aspects to normalize syndrome

 

Filed Under: BioPsych

‘There are two great principles of psychology: people have a tremendous capacity to change, and we usually don’t.”   Ken Tangen

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