Abstract

AP-2 is a family of transcription factors involved in many aspects of development, cell differentiation, and regulation of cell growth and death. AP-2δ is a member of this group and specific gene expression patterns are required in the adult mouse brain for the development of parts of the inferior colliculus (IC), as well as the cortex, dorsal thalamus, and superior colliculus. The midbrain is one of the central areas in the brain where multimodal integration, i.e., integration of information from different senses, occurs. Previous data showed that AP-2δ-deficient mice are viable but due to increased apoptosis at the end of embryogenesis, lack part of the posterior midbrain. Despite the absence of the IC in AP-2δ-deficient mice, these animals retain at least some higher auditory functions. Neuronal responses to tones in the neocortex suggest an alternative auditory pathway that bypasses the IC. While sufficient data are available in mammals, little is known about AP-2δ in chickens, an avian model for the localization of sounds and the development of auditory circuits in the brain. Here, we identified and localized AP-2δ expression in the chicken midbrain during embryogenesis. Our data confirmed the presence of AP-2δ in the inferior colliculus and optic tectum (TeO), specifically in shepherd’s crook neurons, which are an essential component of the midbrain isthmic network and involved in multimodal integration. AP-2δ expression in the chicken midbrain may be related to the integration of both auditory and visual afferents in these neurons. In the future, these insights may allow for a more detailed study of circuitry and computational rules of auditory and multimodal networks.

Highlights

  • The vertebrate midbrain is a central hub for fast visual and multimodal orientation in complex environments (Basso and May, 2017; Herman et al, 2018)

  • AP-2δ expression was strong in the midbrain and forebrain at E10 and E14, decreasing in the later stages (E 18 and post hatch day 2, P2)

  • The midbrain is a subcortical area involved in important functions such as multimodal integration, movement initiation, bottom-up attention, and stimulus selection

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Summary

Introduction

The vertebrate midbrain is a central hub for fast visual and multimodal orientation in complex environments (Basso and May, 2017; Herman et al, 2018). In the external nucleus of the IC (ICx), auditory spatial receptive fields are formed as an auditory map of space (Knudsen and Konishi, 1978). This map is projected onto the TeO via direct and indirect connections (Peña and Gutfreund, 2014; Niederleitner et al, 2017). Bimodal cells in the TeO have both a small visual receptive field and a much larger auditory spatial receptive field (Knudsen, 1982). Multimodal integration facilitates and accelerates the detection of weak stimuli in behavior (Whitchurch and Takahashi, 2006; Verhaal and Luksch, 2016)

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