Abstract

In schizophrenia, evoked 40-Hz auditory steady-state responses (ASSRs) are impaired, which reflects the sensory deficits in this disorder, and baseline spontaneous oscillatory activity also appears to be abnormal. It has been debated whether the evoked ASSR impairments are due to the possible increase in baseline power. GABAergic interneuron-specific NMDA receptor (NMDAR) hypofunction mutant mice mimic some behavioral and pathophysiological aspects of schizophrenia. To determine the presence and extent of sensory deficits in these mutant mice, we recorded spontaneous local field potential (LFP) activity and its click-train evoked ASSRs from primary auditory cortex of awake, head-restrained mice. Baseline spontaneous LFP power in the pre-stimulus period before application of the first click trains was augmented at a wide range of frequencies. However, when repetitive ASSR stimuli were presented every 20 s, averaged spontaneous LFP power amplitudes during the inter-ASSR stimulus intervals in the mutant mice became indistinguishable from the levels of control mice. Nonetheless, the evoked 40-Hz ASSR power and their phase locking to click trains were robustly impaired in the mutants, although the evoked 20-Hz ASSRs were also somewhat diminished. These results suggested that NMDAR hypofunction in cortical GABAergic neurons confers two brain state-dependent LFP abnormalities in the auditory cortex; (1) a broadband increase in spontaneous LFP power in the absence of external inputs, and (2) a robust deficit in the evoked ASSR power and its phase-locking despite of normal baseline LFP power magnitude during the repetitive auditory stimuli. The “paradoxically” high spontaneous LFP activity of the primary auditory cortex in the absence of external stimuli may possibly contribute to the emergence of schizophrenia-related aberrant auditory perception.

Highlights

  • Neural oscillation and synchronization abnormalities have been suggested to play a role in the information and sensory processing deficits commonly seen in schizophrenia (Ford and Mathalon, 2008; Uhlhaas and Singer, 2010; Gandal et al, 2012a)

  • The evoked 40-Hz auditory steady-state response (ASSR) power and their phase locking to click trains were robustly impaired in the mutants, the evoked 20-Hz ASSRs were somewhat diminished. These results suggested that NMDA receptor (NMDAR) hypofunction in cortical GABAergic neurons confers two brain state-dependent local field potential (LFP) abnormalities in the auditory cortex; (1) a broadband increase in spontaneous LFP power in the absence of external inputs, and (2) a robust deficit in the evoked ASSR power and its phase-locking despite of normal baseline LFP power magnitude during the repetitive auditory stimuli

  • These findings suggest that mutants are severely impaired in 40-Hz ASSR for both amplitude and phase locking, both of which are reminiscent of ASSR deficits in schizophrenia patients

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Summary

Introduction

Neural oscillation and synchronization abnormalities have been suggested to play a role in the information and sensory processing deficits commonly seen in schizophrenia (Ford and Mathalon, 2008; Uhlhaas and Singer, 2010; Gandal et al, 2012a). Periodic auditory stimulation entrains the electro-encephalogram (EEG) to a specific phase and frequency, often referred to as the auditory steady-state response (ASSR) In both human and animal models, the ASSR has been used to assess the functional integrity of neural circuits that support synchronization (Picton et al, 2003; Brenner et al, 2009; O’Donnell et al, 2013). In schizophrenia the evidence regarding baseline gamma activity abnormalities is inconsistent Both increases (Jalili et al, 2007; Venables et al, 2009; Kikuchi et al, 2011; Spencer, 2012) and decreases (Yeragani et al, 2006; Rutter et al, 2009) in baseline spontaneous gamma power during pre-stimulus period or “resting state” have been reported. The reason for these contradictory results has yet to be clarified

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