Behavioral Neuroscience, Experimental and Physiological Psychology, Philipps-University of Marburg, Gutenbergstr. 18, 35032 Marburg, Germany.
Neurobiol Learn Mem. 2012 Sep;98(2):154-64. doi: 10.1016/j.nlm.2012.05.004. Epub 2012 Jun 4.
Rats emit distinct types of ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs), which serve as situation-dependent affective signals. In appetitive situations, such as rough-and-tumble-play, high-frequency 50-kHz USVs occur, whereas low-frequency 22-kHz USVs can be observed in aversive situations, such as social defeat. USVs serve distinct communicative functions and induce call-specific behavioral responses in the receiver. While aversive 22-kHz USVs serve as alarm calls and induce behavioral inhibition, appetitive 50-kHz USVs have a pro-social communicative function and elicit social approach behavior, supporting the notion that they serve as social contact calls to (re)establish or maintain contact among conspecifics. The aim of the present study was to use the rat's ability to communicate in the ultrasonic range via high-frequency 50-kHz USVs in order to develop a test for social acoustic memory in rats with relevance for human verbal memory. Verbal learning and memory is among the seven cognitive domains identified as commonly deficient in human schizophrenia patients, but particularly difficult to model. We therefore tested whether the induction of social approach behavior by playback of appetitive 50-kHz USVs is dependent on (1) acoustic stimulus configuration and (2) social long-term memory, and whether (3) social long-term memory effects can be blocked by the administration of scopolamine, a muscarinic acetylcholine antagonist producing amnesia. Results show that social approach behavior in response to playback of natural 50-kHz USVs depends on acoustic stimulus configuration and occurs only when sound energy is concentrated to a critical frequency band in the ultrasonic range. Social approach behavior was detected during the first exposure to playback of 50-kHz USVs, whereas no such response was observed during the second exposure 1week later, indicating a stable memory trace. In contrast, when memory formation was blocked by i.p. administration of scopolamine (0.5mg/kg or 1.5mg/kg) immediately after the first exposure, rats displayed social approach behavior during the second exposure as well. Induction of social approach behavior in response to repeated playback of natural 50-kHz USVs may therefore provide a new and rather unique approach for testing social acoustic memory in rats with relevance to human verbal memory.
大鼠发出独特类型的超声波(USVs),这些声音是情境依赖的情感信号。在愉快的情境中,例如打闹玩耍,会出现高频 50-kHz USVs;而在厌恶的情境中,例如社交挫败,会出现低频 22-kHz USVs。USVs 具有不同的交际功能,并在接收者中引起特定于呼叫的行为反应。虽然厌恶的 22-kHz USVs 作为警报呼叫并引起行为抑制,但愉快的 50-kHz USVs 具有促进社交的交际功能,并引起社交接近行为,支持它们作为社交接触呼叫以(重新)建立或维持同种动物之间的联系的观点。本研究的目的是利用大鼠通过高频 50-kHz USVs 进行超声范围内交流的能力,开发一种用于测试大鼠社交声音记忆的测试方法,该方法与人类言语记忆有关。言语学习和记忆是人类精神分裂症患者常见的七种认知领域之一,但特别难以建模。因此,我们测试了通过播放愉快的 50-kHz USVs 诱导社交接近行为是否取决于 (1) 声学刺激配置和 (2) 社交长期记忆,以及 (3) 社交长期记忆效应是否可以通过施用 scopolamine 来阻断,scopolamine 是一种产生健忘的毒蕈碱乙酰胆碱拮抗剂。结果表明,对自然 50-kHz USVs 的播放的社交接近行为取决于声学刺激配置,并且仅在声音能量集中在超声范围内的关键频带时才发生。在第一次接触 50-kHz USVs 的播放时检测到社交接近行为,而在 1 周后第二次接触时则没有观察到这种反应,表明存在稳定的记忆痕迹。相比之下,当通过 i.p. 立即在第一次接触后施用 scopolamine(0.5mg/kg 或 1.5mg/kg)阻断记忆形成时,大鼠在第二次接触时也表现出社交接近行为。对自然 50-kHz USVs 的重复播放的社交接近行为的诱导可能为测试与人类言语记忆相关的大鼠社交声音记忆提供一种新的且非常独特的方法。