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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 4 October 2002, pp. 1903-1914
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Neuroscience, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
Luo, Minmin and
David J. Perkel.
Intrinsic and Synaptic Properties of Neurons in an Avian Thalamic
Nucleus During Song Learning. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 1903-1914, 2002. The anterior forebrain pathway
(AFP) of the avian song system is a circuit essential for song learning
but not for song production. This pathway consists of a loop serially
connecting area X in the basal ganglia, the medial portion of the
dorsolateral nucleus of thalamus (DLM), and the pallial lateral
magnocellular nucleus of the anterior neostriatum (lMAN). The majority
of DLM neurons in adult male zebra finches closely resemble mammalian
thalamocortical neurons in both their intrinsic properties and the
strong GABAergic inhibitory input they receive from the basal ganglia.
These observations support the hypothesis that the AFP and the
mammalian basal ganglia-thalamocortical pathway use similar
information-processing mechanisms during sensorimotor learning. Our
goal was to determine whether the cellular properties of DLM neurons
are already established in juvenile birds in the sensorimotor phase of
song learning when the AFP is essential. Current- and voltage-clamp
recording in DLM of juvenile male zebra finches showed that juvenile
DLM has two distinct cell types with intrinsic properties largely
similar to those of their respective adult counterparts. Immunostaining
for glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) in juvenile zebra finches
revealed that, as in adults, most area X somata are large and strongly
GAD+ and that their terminals in DLM form dense GAD+ baskets around
somata. GAD immunoreactivity in DLM was depleted by lesions of area X,
indicating that a strong GABAergic projection from area X to DLM is
already established in juveniles. Some of the DLM neurons exhibited
large, spontaneous GABAergic synaptic events. Stimulation of the
afferent pathway evoked an inhibitory postsynaptic potential or current
that was blocked by the GABAA receptor antagonist
bicuculline methiodide. The decay of the GABAA
receptor-mediated currents was slower in juvenile neurons than in
adults. In addition, the reversal potential for these currents in
juveniles was significantly more depolarized both than that in adults
and than the Cl
equilibrium potential; yet the
reversal potential was still well below the firing threshold and thus
inhibitory in the slice preparation. Our findings suggest that the
signal-processing role of DLM during sensorimotor learning is generally
similar to that in adulthood but that quantitative changes in synaptic
transmission accompany the development of stereotyped song.
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