Keck Center for Integrative Neuroscience, Department of Physiology, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143-0444, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2011 Oct;106(4):1806-21. doi: 10.1152/jn.00311.2011. Epub 2011 Jul 6.
In songbirds, the basal ganglia outflow nucleus LMAN is a cortical analog that is required for several forms of song plasticity and learning. Moreover, in adults, inactivating LMAN can reverse the initial expression of learning driven via aversive reinforcement. In the present study, we investigated how LMAN contributes to both reinforcement-driven learning and a self-driven recovery process in adult Bengalese finches. We first drove changes in the fundamental frequency of targeted song syllables and compared the effects of inactivating LMAN with the effects of interfering with N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-dependent transmission from LMAN to one of its principal targets, the song premotor nucleus RA. Inactivating LMAN and blocking NMDA receptors in RA caused indistinguishable reversions in the expression of learning, indicating that LMAN contributes to learning through NMDA receptor-mediated glutamatergic transmission to RA. We next assessed how LMAN's role evolves over time by maintaining learned changes to song while periodically inactivating LMAN. The expression of learning consolidated to become LMAN independent over multiple days, indicating that this form of consolidation is not completed over one night, as previously suggested, and instead may occur gradually during singing. Subsequent cessation of reinforcement was followed by a gradual self-driven recovery of original song structure, indicating that consolidation does not correspond with the lasting retention of changes to song. Finally, for self-driven recovery, as for reinforcement-driven learning, LMAN was required for the expression of initial, but not later, changes to song. Our results indicate that NMDA receptor-dependent transmission from LMAN to RA plays an essential role in the initial expression of two distinct forms of vocal learning and that this role gradually wanes over a multiday process of consolidation. The results support an emerging view that cortical-basal ganglia circuits can direct the initial expression of learning via top-down influences on primary motor circuitry.
在鸣禽中,基底神经节输出核 LMAN 是一个皮质类似物,它是几种形式的鸣曲可塑性和学习所必需的。此外,在成年期,失活 LMAN 可以逆转通过厌恶强化驱动的学习的初始表达。在本研究中,我们研究了 LMAN 如何促进成年孟加拉雀的强化驱动学习和自我驱动恢复过程。我们首先驱动目标鸣曲音节的基频发生变化,并比较了失活 LMAN 的效果与干扰 LMAN 到其主要靶标之一 RA(鸣曲前运动核)的 NMDA 受体依赖性传递的效果。失活 LMAN 和阻断 RA 中的 NMDA 受体导致学习表达的不可区分的反转,表明 LMAN 通过 NMDA 受体介导的谷氨酸能传递到 RA 对学习做出贡献。接下来,我们通过在定期失活 LMAN 的同时维持学习引起的歌曲变化,评估了 LMAN 作用如何随时间演变。学习的表达巩固为 LMAN 独立,持续多日,这表明这种形式的巩固不是在一夜之间完成的,如先前所建议的,而是可能在唱歌期间逐渐发生。随后停止强化后,原始歌曲结构逐渐自我驱动恢复,表明巩固与歌曲变化的持久保留并不对应。最后,对于自我驱动的恢复,就像强化驱动的学习一样,LMAN 是表达歌曲最初但不是后来变化所必需的。我们的结果表明,从 LMAN 到 RA 的 NMDA 受体依赖性传递在两种不同形式的发声学习的初始表达中起着至关重要的作用,并且这种作用在多日的巩固过程中逐渐减弱。这些结果支持了一种新兴的观点,即皮质基底神经节回路可以通过对主要运动回路的自上而下的影响来指导学习的初始表达。