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Publication : Norepinephrine is necessary for experience-dependent plasticity in the developing mouse auditory cortex.

First Author  Shepard KN Year  2015
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  35
Issue  6 Pages  2432-7
PubMed ID  25673838 Mgi Jnum  J:219879
Mgi Id  MGI:5629898 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0532-14.2015
Citation  Shepard KN, et al. (2015) Norepinephrine is necessary for experience-dependent plasticity in the developing mouse auditory cortex. J Neurosci 35(6):2432-7
abstractText  Critical periods are developmental windows during which the stimuli an animal encounters can reshape response properties in the affected system to a profound degree. Despite this window's importance, the neural mechanisms that regulate it are not completely understood. Pioneering studies in visual cortex initially indicated that norepinephrine (NE) permits ocular dominance column plasticity during the critical period, but later research has suggested otherwise. More recent work implicating NE in experience-dependent plasticity in the adult auditory cortex led us to re-examine the role of NE in critical period plasticity. Here, we exposed dopamine beta-hydroxylase knock-out (Dbh(-/-)) mice, which lack NE completely from birth, to a biased acoustic environment during the auditory cortical critical period. This manipulation led to a redistribution of best frequencies (BFs) across auditory cortex in our control mice, consistent with prior work. By contrast, Dbh(-/-) mice failed to exhibit the expected redistribution of BFs, even though NE-deficient and NE-competent mice showed comparable auditory cortical organization when reared in a quiet colony environment. These data suggest that while intrinsic tonotopic patterning of auditory cortical circuitry occurs independently from NE, NE is required for critical period plasticity in auditory cortex.
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