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Human-specific increase of dopaminergic innervation in a striatal region associated with speech and language: a comparative analysis of the primate basal ganglia
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December 29 2015
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Source: J Comp Neurol. 524(10):2117-2129
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Alternative Title:J Comp Neurol
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Description:The dopaminergic innervation of the striatum has been implicated in learning processes and in the development of human speech and language. Several lines of evidence suggest that evolutionary changes in dopaminergic afferents of the striatum may be associated with uniquely human cognitive and behavioral abilities, including the association of the human-specific sequence of the FOXP2 gene with decreased dopamine in the dorsomedial striatum of mice. To examine this possibility, we quantified the density of tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive axons as a measure of dopaminergic innervation within five basal ganglia regions in humans, great apes, and New and Old World monkeys. Our results indicate that humans differ from nonhuman primate species in having a significant increase in dopaminergic innervation selectively localized to the medial caudate nucleus. This region of the striatum is highly interconnected, receiving afferents from multiple neocortical regions, and supports behavioral and cognitive flexibility. The medial caudate nucleus also shows hyperactivity in humans lacking a functional FOXP2 allele and exhibits altered dopamine concentrations in humanized Foxp2 mice. Additionally, striatal dopaminergic input was not altered in chimpanzees that used socially learned attention-getting sounds versus those that did not. This evidence indicates that the increase in dopamine innervation of the medial caudate nucleus in humans is a species-typical characteristic not associated with experience-dependent plasticity. The specificity of this increase may be related to the degree of convergence from cortical areas within this region of the striatum and may also be involved in human speech and language. J. Comp. Neurol. 524:2117-2129, 2016. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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Pubmed ID:26715195
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Pubmed Central ID:PMC4860035
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Funding:P30 AG013854/NIA NIH HHS/National Institute on Aging/United States ; R24 NS092988/NINDS NIH HHS/National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke/United States ; P51 OD011132/ODCDC CDC HHS/Office of the Director/United States ; P51 RR000166/NCRR NIH HHS/National Center for Research Resources/United States ; M01 RR000048/NCRR NIH HHS/National Center for Research Resources/United States ; ... More +
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Volume:524
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Issue:10
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