Cholinergic modulation of frequency receptive fields in auditory cortex: I. Frequency-specific effects of muscarinic agonists.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Previously we reported that acetylcholine (ACh) and acetyl-beta-methacholine (MCh) modify responses of neurons in auditory cortex to individual frequencies. The purpose of this study was to determine whether muscarinic agonists produce frequency-specific alterations or general changes in cellular responses. Frequency-specific modifications would be evident in alterations of frequency receptive fields (FRF) that differed across frequencies while general effects would be seen as changes that were more or less the same over frequencies. Responses of single neurons to designated sets of tones were recorded in the auditory cortex of chronically prepared awake cats before, during, and following ejection of ACh or MCh by iontophoresis or micropressure using multibarrel micropipettes. Frequency receptive fields were determined by presenting isointensity tones across a range of frequencies including the cell's best frequency (BF) to tone onset. FRF for "off" and "sustained (through)" responses were also determined quantitatively. The effects of ACh and MCh were predominantly frequency-specific (77%, 39/51 cells); general changes (19%, 10/51) and no effects (4%, 2/51) were less likely. Frequency-specific effects involved both facilitation and reduction of the same response component to different frequencies within the same neuron. For responses to tone onset (but not "through" and "off" responses), agonists were more likely to produce a decrease at the BF while simultaneously increasing responses to other frequencies. Agonists could increase or decrease frequency selectivity. Effects of agonists could be blocked by atropine, suggesting involvement of muscarinic receptors.
منابع مشابه
Cholinergic modulation of frequency receptive fields in auditory cortex: II. Frequency-specific effects of anticholinesterases provide evidence for a modulatory action of endogenous ACh.
Exogenously applied muscarinic agonists--for example, acetylcholine (ACh) and acetyl-beta-methacholine (MCh)--modify frequency receptive fields in auditory cortex of unanesthetized animals in a frequency-specific rather than global manner. The present study sought to relate these findings to endogenous actions of ACh by using the anticholinesterase agents eserine sulphate and soman (0-1,2,2-tri...
متن کاملCholinergic modulation of responses to single tones produces tone-specific receptive field alterations in cat auditory cortex.
Acetylcholine (ACh), acting via muscarinic receptors, is known to modulate neuronal responsiveness in primary sensory neocortex. The administration of ACh to cortical neurons facilitates or suppresses responses to sensory stimuli, and these effects can endure well beyond the period of ACh application. In the present study, we sought to determine whether ACh produces a general change in sensory ...
متن کاملAcetylcholine produces stimulus-specific receptive field alterations in cat auditory cortex.
Frequency receptive fields (RFs) were determined before and after pairing iontophoretic administration of acetylcholine (ACh) with a repeated single-frequency stimulus in the auditory cortex of barbiturate-anesthetized cats. In 58% of the cells, the paired ACh + tone treatment produced subsequent alterations of frequency RFs. In half of these cases, the RF modifications were highly specific to ...
متن کاملNetwork architecture, receptive fields, and neuromodulation: computational and functional implications of cholinergic modulation in primary auditory cortex.
Two fundamental issues in auditory cortical processing are the relative importance of thalamocortical versus intracortical circuits in shaping response properties in primary auditory cortex (ACx), and how the effects of neuromodulators on these circuits affect dynamic changes in network and receptive field properties that enhance signal processing and adaptive behavior. To investigate these iss...
متن کاملLearning-induced changes of auditory receptive fields.
Classical conditioning specifically modifies receptive fields in primary and secondary auditory cortical areas to favor the frequency of a tone signal over other frequencies, including tuning shifts toward, or to, this frequency. This plasticity of receptive fields is associative and highly specific, can develop very rapidly, can be expressed under anesthesia and can be maintained indefinitely....
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Synapse
دوره 4 1 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1989