Somatodendritic neuropeptide release potentiates GABAergic synapses in the VTA
Sep
28
2026
Sep
28
2026
Description
Dr. Julie Kauer is a Professor of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University.
Neuropeptides are contained in nearly every neuron in the central nervous system and can be released not only from nerve terminals but also from somatodendritic sites. Cholecystokinin (CCK), among the most abundant neuropeptides in the brain, is expressed in the majority of midbrain dopamine neurons. Despite this high
expression, CCK function within the ventral tegmental area (VTA) is not well understood. We found that VTA dopamine neurons release CCK from somatodendritic regions, where it triggers long-term potentiation of GABAergic synapses. The somatodendritic release occurs during trains of optogenetic stimuli or prolonged but modest depolarization. Paired-recording experiments demonstrated that CCK released from a single dopamine neuron is sufficient to induce LTP in synapses on neighboring neurons, suggesting that somatodendritic CCK release may influence a substantial fraction of nearby dopamine neurons and coordinate plasticity across local ensembles rather than acting in a strict cell- or synapse-autonomous manner. In vivo, intra-VTA–infused CCK reduced dopamine cell Ca2+ signals during food consumption and was correlated with reduced food intake. Our experiments introduce somatodendritic neuropeptide release as a previously unknown feedback regulator of VTA dopamine cell excitability and support the idea that peptide signaling adds complexity and richness to neural circuits.
Hosted by Dr. Lief Fenno
To subscribe to our Seminars Series mailing list, please visit https://utlists.utexas.edu/sympa/info/neu-seminars and click on "Subscribe" in the left-hand column.
Please contact Neuro.Seminar.Series@austin.utexas.edu with any questions.
Location
Seay Library 4.244
Share
Other Events in This Series
Jan
26
2026
A Neural Circuit for Economic Decisions
2025-26 Neuroscience Seminar Series
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Speaker(s): Camillo Padoa-Schioppa - Washington University in St. Louis
Feb
2
2026
Synaptic Signaling in Memory and Chronic Pain-Related Disorders
2025-26 Neuroscience Seminar Series
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Speaker(s): Kimberly Tolias - Baylor College of Medicine
Feb
9
2026
Membrane curvature-regulated intracellular signaling
2025-26 Neuroscience Seminar Series
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Speaker(s): Bianxiao Cui - Stanford University
Feb
16
2026
Credit assignment through critical period plasticity
2025-26 Neuroscience Seminar Series
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Speaker(s): David Ehrlich - University of Wisconsin-Madison
Mar
9
2026
The curious case of dopaminergic error signals and learning beyond value….
2025-26 Neuroscience Seminar Series
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Speaker(s): Geoffrey Schoenbaum - NIH
Mar
30
2026
Hypothalamic Supramammillary Glutamatergic Circuits Linking Salience to Mesolimbic Dopamine and Reinforcement
2025-26 Neuroscience Seminar Series
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Speaker(s): Satoshi Ikemoto - NIH
Apr
13
2026
Feeling the force: PIEZO ion channels in interoception
2025-26 Neuroscience Seminar Series
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Speaker(s): Kara Marshall - Baylor College of Medicine
Apr
20
2026
Investigating the Neuronal and Network-Level Mechanisms Underlying Alzheimer’s Disease
2025-26 Neuroscience Seminar Series
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Speaker(s): Andrew George - Virgina Commonwealth University
Apr
27
2026
Neural Mechanisms of Spatial Orientation
2025-26 Neuroscience Seminar Series
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Speaker(s): Mark Brandon - McGill University
Aug
31
2026
A Neural Circuit for Economic Decisions
2026-27 Neuroscience Seminar Series
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm • In Person
Speaker(s): Camillo Padoa-Schioppa - Washington University in St. Louis