Wada Kazuhiro, Sakaguchi Hironobu, Jarvis Erich D, Hagiwara Masatoshi
Department of Neurobiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710, USA.
J Comp Neurol. 2004 Aug 9;476(1):44-64. doi: 10.1002/cne.20201.
Learned vocalization, the substrate for human language, is a rare trait. It is found in three distantly related groups of birds-parrots, hummingbirds, and songbirds. These three groups contain cerebral vocal nuclei for learned vocalization not found in their more closely related vocal nonlearning relatives. Here, we cloned 21 receptor subunits/subtypes of all four glutamate receptor families (AMPA, kainate, NMDA, and metabotropic) and examined their expression in vocal nuclei of songbirds. We also examined expression of a subset of these receptors in vocal nuclei of hummingbirds and parrots, as well as in the brains of dove species as examples of close vocal nonlearning relatives. Among the 21 subunits/subtypes, 19 showed higher and/or lower prominent differential expression in songbird vocal nuclei relative to the surrounding brain subdivisions in which the vocal nuclei are located. This included relatively lower levels of all four AMPA subunits in lMAN, strikingly higher levels of the kainite subunit GluR5 in the robust nucleus of the arcopallium (RA), higher and lower levels respectively of the NMDA subunits NR2A and NR2B in most vocal nuclei and lower levels of the metabotropic group I subtypes (mGluR1 and -5) in most vocal nuclei and the group II subtype (mGluR2), showing a unique expression pattern of very low levels in RA and very high levels in HVC. The splice variants of AMPA subunits showed further differential expression in vocal nuclei. Some of the receptor subunits/subtypes also showed differential expression in hummingbird and parrot vocal nuclei. The magnitude of differential expression in vocal nuclei of all three vocal learners was unique compared with the smaller magnitude of differences found for nonvocal areas of vocal learners and vocal nonlearners. Our results suggest that evolution of vocal learning was accompanied by differential expression of a conserved gene family for synaptic transmission and plasticity in vocal nuclei. They also suggest that neural activity and signal transduction in vocal nuclei of vocal learners will be different relative to the surrounding brain areas.
习得性发声是人类语言的基础,是一种罕见的特征。它在三类亲缘关系较远的鸟类——鹦鹉、蜂鸟和鸣禽中被发现。这三类鸟都有用于习得性发声的大脑发声核团,而在与其亲缘关系更近的非发声学习的亲属中则没有。在这里,我们克隆了所有四个谷氨酸受体家族(AMPA、海人藻酸、NMDA和代谢型)的21种受体亚基/亚型,并检测了它们在鸣禽发声核团中的表达。我们还检测了这些受体的一个子集在蜂鸟和鹦鹉发声核团中的表达,以及在鸽类大脑中的表达,鸽类作为亲缘关系较近的非发声学习鸟类的例子。在这21种亚基/亚型中,19种在鸣禽发声核团中的表达相对于发声核团所在的周围脑区表现出更高和/或更低的显著差异表达。这包括在侧巨细胞核外侧部(lMAN)中所有四种AMPA亚基的水平相对较低,在弓状皮质粗核(RA)中海人藻酸亚基GluR5的水平显著较高,在大多数发声核团中NMDA亚基NR2A和NR2B的水平分别较高和较低,以及在大多数发声核团和II组亚型(mGluR2)中代谢型I组亚型(mGluR1和-5)的水平较低,在RA中表现出极低水平而在HVC中表现出极高水平的独特表达模式。AMPA亚基的剪接变体在发声核团中表现出进一步的差异表达。一些受体亚基/亚型在蜂鸟和鹦鹉发声核团中也表现出差异表达。与发声学习鸟类的非发声区域和非发声学习鸟类中发现的较小差异幅度相比,所有三种发声学习鸟类的发声核团中差异表达的幅度是独特的。我们的结果表明,发声学习的进化伴随着一个保守基因家族在发声核团中用于突触传递和可塑性的差异表达。它们还表明,发声学习鸟类发声核团中的神经活动和信号转导相对于周围脑区将有所不同。