| Literature DB >> 31636217 |
Miguel Sánchez-Valpuesta1, Yumeno Suzuki1, Yukino Shibata1, Noriyuki Toji2, Yu Ji1, Nasiba Afrin1, Chinweike Norman Asogwa1, Ippei Kojima1, Daisuke Mizuguchi3, Satoshi Kojima3, Kazuo Okanoya4, Haruo Okado5, Kenta Kobayashi6, Kazuhiro Wada7,2,8.
Abstract
Birdsong, like human speech, consists of a sequence of temporally precise movements acquired through vocal learning. The learning of such sequential vocalizations depends on the neural function of the motor cortex and basal ganglia. However, it is unknown how the connections between cortical and basal ganglia components contribute to vocal motor skill learning, as mammalian motor cortices serve multiple types of motor action and most experimentally tractable animals do not exhibit vocal learning. Here, we leveraged the zebra finch, a songbird, as an animal model to explore the function of the connectivity between cortex-like (HVC) and basal ganglia (area X), connected by HVC(X) projection neurons with temporally precise firing during singing. By specifically ablating HVC(X) neurons, juvenile zebra finches failed to copy tutored syllable acoustics and developed temporally unstable songs with less sequence consistency. In contrast, HVC(X)-ablated adults did not alter their learned song structure, but generated acoustic fluctuations and responded to auditory feedback disruption by the introduction of song deterioration, as did normal adults. These results indicate that the corticobasal ganglia input is important for learning the acoustic and temporal aspects of song structure, but not for generating vocal fluctuations that contribute to the maintenance of an already learned vocal pattern.Entities:
Keywords: critical period; sensorimotor learning; sensory feedback; time-locked firing; zebra finch
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31636217 PMCID: PMC6842584 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1913575116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205