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Astrocytes are increasingly appreciated to possess underestimated and important roles in modulating neuronal circuits. Astrocytes in striatum can regulate dopamine transmission by governing the extracellular tone of axonal neuromodulators, including GABA and adenosine. However, here we reveal that striatal astrocytes occupy a cell type-specific anatomical and functional relationship with cholinergic interneurons (ChIs), through which they rapidly excite ChIs and govern dopamine release via nicotinic acetylcholine receptors on subsecond timescales. We identify that ChI somata are in unexpectedly close proximity to astrocyte somata, in mouse and human, forming a "soma-to-soma" satellite-like configuration not typically observed for other striatal neurons. We find that transient depolarization of astrocytes in mouse striatum reversibly regulates ChI excitability by decreasing extracellular calcium. These findings reveal a privileged satellite astrocyte-interneuron interaction for striatal ChIs operating on subsecond timescales via regulation of extracellular calcium dynamics to shape downstream striatal circuit activity and dopamine signaling.

Original publication

DOI

10.1038/s41467-024-54253-7

Type

Journal article

Journal

Nat Commun

Publication Date

19/11/2024

Volume

15

Keywords

Animals, Astrocytes, Dopamine, Interneurons, Corpus Striatum, Mice, Calcium, Humans, Male, Cholinergic Neurons, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Receptors, Nicotinic, Female, Synaptic Transmission