Reversal of Age-Related Changes in Cortical Sound-Azimuth Selectivity with Training

Author:

Cheng Yuan12,Zhang Yifan12,Wang Fang12,Jia Guoqiang12,Zhou Jie12,Shan Ye1,Sun Xinde1,Yu Liping1,Merzenich Michael M3,Recanzone Gregg H4,Yang Lianfang5,Zhou Xiaoming12

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Brain Functional Genomics of Ministry of Education, Shanghai Key Laboratory of Brain Functional Genomics, School of Life Sciences, East China Normal University, Shanghai 200062, China

2. New York University-East China Normal University Institute of Brain and Cognitive Science, New York University Shanghai, Shanghai 200062, China

3. Brain Plasticity Institute, San Francisco, CA 94108, USA

4. Center for Neuroscience and Department of Neurobiology, Physiology and Behavior, University of California at Davis, CA 95616, USA

5. Department of Physical Education, Zhejiang University of Finance & Economics, Hangzhou 310018, China

Abstract

Abstract The compromised abilities to understand speech and localize sounds are two hallmark deficits in aged individuals. Earlier studies have shown that age-related deficits in cortical neural timing, which is clearly associated with speech perception, can be partially reversed with auditory training. However, whether training can reverse aged-related cortical changes in the domain of spatial processing has never been studied. In this study, we examined cortical spatial processing in ~21-month-old rats that were trained on a sound-azimuth discrimination task. We found that animals that experienced 1 month of training displayed sharper cortical sound-azimuth tuning when compared to the age-matched untrained controls. This training-induced remodeling in spatial tuning was paralleled by increases of cortical parvalbumin-labeled inhibitory interneurons. However, no measurable changes in cortical spatial processing were recorded in age-matched animals that were passively exposed to training sounds with no task demands. These results that demonstrate the effects of training on cortical spatial domain processing in the rodent model further support the notion that age-related changes in central neural process are, due to their plastic nature, reversible. Moreover, the results offer the encouraging possibility that behavioral training might be used to attenuate declines in auditory perception, which are commonly observed in older individuals.

Funder

Institute of Brain Science and Education Innovation, East China Normal University

JRI Seed Grant for Collaborative Research

Program of Introducing Talents of Discipline to Universities

Shanghai Science and Technology Committee

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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