4.4 Article

Dopamine Modulation of Motor and Sensory Cortical Plasticity among Vertebrates

Journal

INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY
Volume 61, Issue 1, Pages 316-336

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/icb/icab019

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Funding

  1. United States National Institutes of Health [R01NS082179]
  2. CAPES-Brazil [13640/13-5]

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Goal-directed learning is crucial for evolutionary fitness in animals, with dopamine playing a significant role in mediating this process. Research on dopamine's role in higher order cortical regions is mainly focused on rodents and primates, limiting our understanding in other vertebrate groups. More studies on non-mammalian species are needed to further elucidate how dopamine has evolved across vertebrates to shape their brain structures and behaviors.
Goal-directed learning is a key contributor to evolutionary fitness in animals. The neural mechanisms that mediate learning often involve the neuromodulator dopamine. In higher order cortical regions, most of what is known about dopamine's role is derived from brain regions involved in motivation and decision-making, while significantly less is known about dopamine's potential role in motor and/or sensory brain regions to guide performance. Research on rodents and primates represents over 95% of publications in the field, while little beyond basic anatomy is known in other vertebrate groups. This significantly limits our general understanding of how dopamine signaling systems have evolved as organisms adapt to their environments. This review takes a pan-vertebrate view of the literature on the role of dopamine in motor/sensory cortical regions, highlighting, when available, research on non-mammalian vertebrates. We provide a broad perspective on dopamine function and emphasize that dopamine-induced plasticity mechanisms are widespread across all cortical systems and associated with motor and sensory adaptations. The available evidence illustrates that there is a strong anatomical basis-dopamine fibers and receptor distributions-to hypothesize that pallial dopamine effects are widespread among vertebrates. Continued research progress in non-mammalian species will be crucial to further our understanding of how the dopamine system evolved to shape the diverse array of brain structures and behaviors among the vertebrate lineage.

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