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1.
J Neurosci ; 43(16): 2850-2859, 2023 04 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36948582

ABSTRACT

Antidepressants, while effective in treating depression and anxiety disorders, also induce deficits in sensory (particularly auditory) processing, which in turn may exacerbate psychiatric symptoms. How antidepressants cause auditory signature deficits remains largely unknown. Here, we found that fluoxetine-treated adult female rats were significantly less accurate when performing a tone-frequency discrimination task compared with age-matched control rats. Their cortical neurons also responded less selectively to sound frequencies. The degraded behavioral and cortical processing was accompanied by decreased cortical perineuronal nets, particularly those wrapped around parvalbumin-expressing inhibitory interneurons. Furthermore, fluoxetine induced critical period-like plasticity in their already mature auditory cortices; therefore, a brief rearing of these drug-treated rats under an enriched acoustic environment renormalized auditory processing degraded by fluoxetine. The altered cortical expression of perineuronal nets was also reversed as a result of enriched sound exposure. These findings suggest that the adverse effects of antidepressants on auditory processing, possibly because of a reduction in intracortical inhibition, can be substantially alleviated by simply pairing drug treatment with passive, enriched sound exposure. They have important implications for understanding the neurobiological basis of antidepressant effects on hearing and for designing novel pharmacological treatment strategies for psychiatric disorders.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Clinical experience suggests that antidepressants adversely affect sensory (particularly auditory) processing, which can exacerbate patients' psychiatric symptoms. Here, we show that the antidepressant fluoxetine reduces cortical inhibition in adult rats, leading to degraded behavioral and cortical spectral processing of sound. Importantly, fluoxetine induces a critical period-like state of plasticity in the mature cortex; therefore, a brief rearing under an enriched acoustic environment is sufficient to reverse the changes in auditory processing caused by the administration of fluoxetine. These results provide a putative neurobiological basis for the effects of antidepressants on hearing and indicate that antidepressant treatment combined with enriched sensory experiences could optimize clinical outcomes.


Subject(s)
Auditory Cortex , Fluoxetine , Rats , Female , Animals , Fluoxetine/pharmacology , Auditory Perception/physiology , Sound , Auditory Cortex/physiology , Antidepressive Agents/pharmacology , Antidepressive Agents/therapeutic use , Acoustic Stimulation/methods
2.
Neuroimage ; 238: 118222, 2021 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34058330

ABSTRACT

We present a novel method to map the functional organization of the human auditory cortex noninvasively using magnetoencephalography (MEG). More specifically, this method estimates via reverse correlation the spectrotemporal receptive fields (STRF) in response to a temporally dense pure tone stimulus, from which important spectrotemporal characteristics of neuronal processing can be extracted and mapped back onto the cortex surface. We show that several neuronal populations can be found examining the spectrotemporal characteristics of their STRFs, and demonstrate how these can be used to generate tonotopic gradient maps. In doing so, we show that the spatial resolution of MEG is sufficient to reliably extract important information about the spatial organization of the auditory cortex, while enabling the analysis of complex temporal dynamics of auditory processing such as best temporal modulation rate and response latency given its excellent temporal resolution. Furthermore, because spectrotemporally dense auditory stimuli can be used with MEG, the time required to acquire the necessary data to generate tonotopic maps is significantly less for MEG than for other neuroimaging tools that acquire BOLD-like signals.


Subject(s)
Auditory Cortex/physiology , Brain Mapping/methods , Magnetoencephalography/methods , Acoustic Stimulation , Adult , Auditory Perception/physiology , Dominance, Cerebral , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Neurons/physiology , Young Adult
3.
J Neurosci ; 40(11): 2259-2268, 2020 03 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32024780

ABSTRACT

Frequency discrimination learning is often accompanied by an expansion of the functional region corresponding to the target frequency within the auditory cortex. Although the perceptual significance of this plastic functional reorganization remains debated, greater cortical representation is generally thought to improve perception for a stimulus. Recently, the ability to expand functional representations through passive sound experience has been demonstrated in adult rats, suggesting that it may be possible to design passive sound exposures to enhance specific perceptual abilities in adulthood. To test this hypothesis, we exposed adult female Long-Evans rats to 2 weeks of moderate-intensity broadband white noise followed by 1 week of 7 kHz tone pips, a paradigm that results in the functional over-representation of 7 kHz within the adult tonotopic map. We then tested the ability of exposed rats to identify 7 kHz among distractor tones on an adaptive tone discrimination task. Contrary to our expectations, we found that map expansion impaired frequency discrimination and delayed perceptual learning. Rats exposed to noise followed by 15 kHz tone pips were not impaired at the same task. Exposed rats also exhibited changes in auditory cortical responses consistent with reduced discriminability of the exposure tone. Encouragingly, these deficits were completely recovered with training. Our results provide strong evidence that map expansion alone does not imply improved perception. Rather, plastic changes in frequency representation induced by bottom-up processes can worsen perceptual faculties, but because of the very nature of plasticity these changes are inherently reversible.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The potent ability of our acoustic environment to shape cortical sensory representations throughout life has led to a growing interest in harnessing both passive sound experience and operant perceptual learning to enhance mature cortical function. We use sound exposure to induce targeted expansions in the adult rat tonotopic map and find that these bottom-up changes unexpectedly impair performance on an adaptive tone discrimination task. Encouragingly, however, we also show that training promotes the recovery of electrophysiological measures of reduced neural discriminability following sound exposure. These results provide support for future neuroplasticity-based treatments that take into account both the sensory statistics of our external environment and perceptual training strategies to improve learning and memory in the adult auditory system.


Subject(s)
Acoustic Stimulation/adverse effects , Auditory Cortex/physiology , Perceptual Disorders/etiology , Pitch Discrimination/physiology , Animals , Brain Mapping/methods , Conditioning, Operant/physiology , Female , Neuronal Plasticity , Noise , Perceptual Disorders/physiopathology , Perceptual Disorders/rehabilitation , Rats , Rats, Long-Evans , Reward
4.
J Neurosci ; 31(15): 5625-34, 2011 Apr 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21490203

ABSTRACT

Since its first description >40 years ago, the neurological "critical period" has been predominantly described as an early, plastic postnatal brain development stage that rather abruptly advances to an aplastic or less plastic "adult" stage. Here, we show that chronic exposure of juvenile or adult rats to moderate-level acoustic noise results in a broad reversal of maturational changes that mark the infant-to-adult progression in the primary auditory cortex. In time, noise exposure reinstates critical period plasticity. Cortical changes resulting from noise exposure are again reversed to reestablish a physically and functionally normal adult cortex, by returning animals to natural acoustic environments. These studies show that at least some of neurological changes believed to mark the transition from the infantile to the mature (adult) stage are, by their nature, reversible.


Subject(s)
Auditory Cortex/growth & development , Auditory Cortex/physiology , Critical Period, Psychological , Neuronal Plasticity/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Algorithms , Animals , Blotting, Western , Brain Mapping , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Electrophysiological Phenomena , Environment , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem/physiology , Female , Noise/adverse effects , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Receptors, GABA-A/metabolism
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 107(33): 14839-44, 2010 Aug 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20679210

ABSTRACT

Adult rats were trained to detect the occurrence of a two-element sound sequence in a background of nine other nontarget sound pairs. Training resulted in a modest, enduring, static expansion of the cortical areas of representation of both target stimulus sounds. More importantly, once the initial stimulus A in the target A-B sequence was presented, the cortical "map" changed dynamically, specifically to exaggerate further the representation of the "anticipated" stimulus B. If B occurred, it was represented over a larger cortical area by more strongly excited, more coordinated, and more selectively responding neurons. This biasing peaked at the expected time of B onset with respect to A onset. No dynamic biasing of responses was recorded for any sound presented in a nontarget pair. Responses to nontarget frequencies flanking the representation of B were reduced in area and in response strength only after the presentation of A at the expected time of B onset. This study shows that cortical areas are not representationally static but, to the contrary, can be biased moment by moment in time as a function of behavioral context.


Subject(s)
Auditory Cortex/physiology , Learning/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Sound , Acoustic Stimulation , Animals , Auditory Cortex/cytology , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Brain Mapping , Discrimination, Psychological/physiology , Female , Models, Neurological , Neurons/cytology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
6.
Nat Neurosci ; 11(8): 957-65, 2008 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18604205

ABSTRACT

During early brain development and through 'adult' experience-dependent plasticity, neural circuits are shaped to represent the external world with high fidelity. When raised in a quiet environment, the rat primary auditory cortex (A1) has a well-defined 'critical period', lasting several days, for its representation of sound frequency. The addition of environmental noise extends the critical period duration as a variable function of noise level. It remains unclear whether critical period closure should be regarded as a unified, externally gated event that applies for all of A1 or if it is controlled by progressive, local, activity-driven changes in this cortical area. We found that rearing rats in the presence of a spectrally limited noise band resulted in the closure of the critical period for A1 sectors representing the noise-free spectral bands, whereas the critical period appeared to remain open in noise-exposed sectors, where the cortex was still functionally and physically immature.


Subject(s)
Auditory Cortex/anatomy & histology , Auditory Cortex/physiology , Critical Period, Psychological , Acoustic Stimulation/methods , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Auditory Cortex/growth & development , Brain Mapping , Electrodes, Implanted , Female , Hearing Tests , Neurons/physiology , Noise , Parvalbumins/biosynthesis , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Reaction Time/physiology , Recovery of Function/physiology , Spectrum Analysis , Time Factors
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