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Familiarity with social sounds alters c-Fos expression in auditory cortex and interacts with estradiol in locus coeruleus

When a social sound category initially gains behavioral significance to an animal, plasticity events presumably enhance the ability to recognize that sound category in the future. In the context of learning natural social stimuli, neuromodulators such as norepinephrine and estrogen have been associa...

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Autores principales: Moreno, Amielle, Gumaste, Ankita, Adams, Geoff K., Chong, Kelly K., Nguyen, Michael, Shepard, Kathryn N., Liu, Robert C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6470399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29983289
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heares.2018.06.020
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author Moreno, Amielle
Gumaste, Ankita
Adams, Geoff K.
Chong, Kelly K.
Nguyen, Michael
Shepard, Kathryn N.
Liu, Robert C.
author_facet Moreno, Amielle
Gumaste, Ankita
Adams, Geoff K.
Chong, Kelly K.
Nguyen, Michael
Shepard, Kathryn N.
Liu, Robert C.
author_sort Moreno, Amielle
collection PubMed
description When a social sound category initially gains behavioral significance to an animal, plasticity events presumably enhance the ability to recognize that sound category in the future. In the context of learning natural social stimuli, neuromodulators such as norepinephrine and estrogen have been associated with experience-dependent plasticity and processing of newly salient social cues, yet continued plasticity once stimuli are familiar could disrupt the stability of sensorineural representations. Here we employed a maternal mouse model of natural sensory cortical plasticity for infant vocalizations to ask whether the engagement of the noradrenergic locus coeruleus (LC) by the playback of pup-calls is affected by either prior experience with the sounds or estrogen availability, using a well-studied cellular activity and plasticity marker, the immediate early gene c-Fos. We counted call-induced c-Fos immunoreactive (cFos-IR) cells in both LC and physiologically validated fields within the auditory cortex (AC) of estradiol or blank-implanted virgin female mice with either 0 or 5-days prior experience caring for vocalizing pups. Estradiol and pup experience interacted both in the induction of c-Fos-IR in the LC, as well as in behavioral measures of locomotion during playback, consistent with the neuromodulatory center’s activity being an online reflection of both hormonal and experience-dependent influences on arousal. Throughout core AC, as well as in a high frequency sub-region of AC and in secondary AC, a main effect of pup experience was to reduce call-induced c-Fos-IR, irrespective of estradiol availability. This is consistent with the hypothesis that sound familiarity leads to less c-Fos-mediated plasticity, and less disrupted sensory representations of a meaningful call category. Taken together, our data support the view that any coupling between these sensory and neuromodulatory areas is situationally dependent, and their engagement depends differentially on both internal state factors like hormones and external state factors like prior experience.
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spelling pubmed-64703992019-04-18 Familiarity with social sounds alters c-Fos expression in auditory cortex and interacts with estradiol in locus coeruleus Moreno, Amielle Gumaste, Ankita Adams, Geoff K. Chong, Kelly K. Nguyen, Michael Shepard, Kathryn N. Liu, Robert C. Hear Res Article When a social sound category initially gains behavioral significance to an animal, plasticity events presumably enhance the ability to recognize that sound category in the future. In the context of learning natural social stimuli, neuromodulators such as norepinephrine and estrogen have been associated with experience-dependent plasticity and processing of newly salient social cues, yet continued plasticity once stimuli are familiar could disrupt the stability of sensorineural representations. Here we employed a maternal mouse model of natural sensory cortical plasticity for infant vocalizations to ask whether the engagement of the noradrenergic locus coeruleus (LC) by the playback of pup-calls is affected by either prior experience with the sounds or estrogen availability, using a well-studied cellular activity and plasticity marker, the immediate early gene c-Fos. We counted call-induced c-Fos immunoreactive (cFos-IR) cells in both LC and physiologically validated fields within the auditory cortex (AC) of estradiol or blank-implanted virgin female mice with either 0 or 5-days prior experience caring for vocalizing pups. Estradiol and pup experience interacted both in the induction of c-Fos-IR in the LC, as well as in behavioral measures of locomotion during playback, consistent with the neuromodulatory center’s activity being an online reflection of both hormonal and experience-dependent influences on arousal. Throughout core AC, as well as in a high frequency sub-region of AC and in secondary AC, a main effect of pup experience was to reduce call-induced c-Fos-IR, irrespective of estradiol availability. This is consistent with the hypothesis that sound familiarity leads to less c-Fos-mediated plasticity, and less disrupted sensory representations of a meaningful call category. Taken together, our data support the view that any coupling between these sensory and neuromodulatory areas is situationally dependent, and their engagement depends differentially on both internal state factors like hormones and external state factors like prior experience. 2018-06-28 2018-09 /pmc/articles/PMC6470399/ /pubmed/29983289 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heares.2018.06.020 Text en This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Moreno, Amielle
Gumaste, Ankita
Adams, Geoff K.
Chong, Kelly K.
Nguyen, Michael
Shepard, Kathryn N.
Liu, Robert C.
Familiarity with social sounds alters c-Fos expression in auditory cortex and interacts with estradiol in locus coeruleus
title Familiarity with social sounds alters c-Fos expression in auditory cortex and interacts with estradiol in locus coeruleus
title_full Familiarity with social sounds alters c-Fos expression in auditory cortex and interacts with estradiol in locus coeruleus
title_fullStr Familiarity with social sounds alters c-Fos expression in auditory cortex and interacts with estradiol in locus coeruleus
title_full_unstemmed Familiarity with social sounds alters c-Fos expression in auditory cortex and interacts with estradiol in locus coeruleus
title_short Familiarity with social sounds alters c-Fos expression in auditory cortex and interacts with estradiol in locus coeruleus
title_sort familiarity with social sounds alters c-fos expression in auditory cortex and interacts with estradiol in locus coeruleus
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6470399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29983289
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heares.2018.06.020
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