Scharff Constance, Haesler Sebastian
Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Ihnestrasse 73, 14195 Berlin, Germany; Freie Universität Berlin, Department of Animal Behavior, Grunewaldstrasse 34, 12165 Berlin, Germany.
Curr Opin Neurobiol. 2005 Dec;15(6):694-703. doi: 10.1016/j.conb.2005.10.004. Epub 2005 Nov 2.
FoxP2 mutations in humans are associated with a disorder that affects both the comprehension of language and its production, speech. This discovery provided the first opportunity to analyze the genetics of language with molecular and neurobiological tools. The amino acid sequence and the neural expression pattern of FoxP2 are extremely conserved, from reptile to man. This suggests an important role for FoxP2 in vertebrate brains, regardless of whether they support imitative vocal learning or not. Its expression pattern pinpoints neural circuits that might have been crucial for the evolution of speech and language, including the basal ganglia and the cerebellum. Recent studies in songbirds show that during times of song plasticity FoxP2 is upregulated in a striatal region essential for song learning. This suggests that FoxP2 plays important roles both in the development of neural circuits and in the postnatal behaviors they mediate.
人类的FoxP2基因突变与一种影响语言理解及语言产出(即言语)的疾病有关。这一发现为运用分子和神经生物学工具分析语言的遗传学提供了首个契机。从爬行动物到人类,FoxP2的氨基酸序列和神经表达模式都极为保守。这表明FoxP2在脊椎动物大脑中发挥着重要作用,无论这些大脑是否支持模仿性发声学习。其表达模式确定了可能对言语和语言进化至关重要的神经回路,包括基底神经节和小脑。近期对鸣禽的研究表明,在歌声可塑性时期,FoxP2在对歌声学习至关重要的纹状体区域上调。这表明FoxP2在神经回路的发育及其介导的出生后行为中均发挥着重要作用。