On 2017 Jan 12, Meg Waraczynski commented:
Thank you for your insights. In hindsight, we should have been much clearer in indicating that we were only strongly inferring the involvement of CaV1.3 channels in our behavioral results, but that we have no direct evidence for this. The inference was based on the facts reviewed in the Introduction, that (1) only CaV1 type channels have been linked to the activity of basal forebrain medium spiny neurons (reference 4); (2) of the CaV1 family, only 1.2 and 1.3 type channels are abundant in the brain (reference 3); and (3) the activation dynamics of 1.3 channels correspond much more closely to the activity state dynamics of medium spiny neurons than do the activation dynamics of 1.2 channels (reference 26). We hoped to use 1.3-specific drugs but, as noted in the Introduction, all such drugs we could find required the use of brain-toxic solvents. The dosages we used were selected based on dosages used by others who intracerebrally injected these drugs to affect behavior (references 1, 6, 7, and 16). We did not intend to focus on implicating CaV1.3 channels specifically in our observations, nor did we intend to have others use our paper as evidence that diltiazem and verapamil are CaV1.3-specific. We regret if this occurs. Our tentative conclusions as to the reward-relevant function of the system we are studying would remain the same even if it were found that our drug injections acted on mechanisms other than CaV1.3 channels specifically. We will be much more cautious when referring to this work in the future to emphasize these functional conclusions and not to implicate CaV1.3 channels specifically.
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