Physiology and pharmacology of striatal neurons

AC Kreitzer - Annual review of neuroscience, 2009 - annualreviews.org
Annual review of neuroscience, 2009annualreviews.org
The basal ganglia occupy the core of the forebrain and consist of evolutionarily conserved
motor nuclei that form recurrent circuits critical for motivation and motor planning. The
striatum is the main input nucleus of the basal ganglia and a key neural substrate for
procedural learning and memory. The vast majority of striatal neurons are spiny GABAergic
projection neurons, which exhibit slow but temporally precise spiking in vivo. Contributing to
this precision are several different types of interneurons that constitute only a small fraction …
The basal ganglia occupy the core of the forebrain and consist of evolutionarily conserved motor nuclei that form recurrent circuits critical for motivation and motor planning. The striatum is the main input nucleus of the basal ganglia and a key neural substrate for procedural learning and memory. The vast majority of striatal neurons are spiny GABAergic projection neurons, which exhibit slow but temporally precise spiking in vivo. Contributing to this precision are several different types of interneurons that constitute only a small fraction of total neuron number but play a critical role in regulating striatal output. This review examines the cellular physiology and modulation of striatal neurons that give rise to their unique properties and function.
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