Abstract

Songbirds learn to sing much as humans learn to speak. In zebra finches, one of the premier songbird models, males learn to sing for later courtship through a multistep learning process during the developmental period. They first listen to and memorize the song of a tutor (normally their father) during the sensory learning period. Then, in the subsequent sensory-motor learning phase (with large overlap), they match their vocalizations to the memorized tutor song via auditory feedback and develop their own unique songs, which they maintain throughout their lives. Previous studies have suggested that memories of tutor songs are shaped in the caudomedial nidopallium (NCM) of the brain, which is analogous to the mammalian higher auditory cortex. Isolation during development, which extends the sensory learning period in males, alters song preference in adult females, and NCM inactivation decreases song preference. However, the development of neurophysiological properties of neurons in this area and the effect of isolation on these neurons have not yet been explained. Here, we performed whole-cell patch-clamp recording on NCM neurons from juvenile zebra finches during the sensory learning period, 20, 40, or 60 days post-hatching (DPH) and examined their neurophysiological properties. In contrast to previous reports in adult NCM neurons, the majority of NCM neurons of juvenile zebra finches showed spontaneous firing with or without burst firing patterns, and the percentage of neurons that fired increased in the middle of the sensory learning period (40 DPH) and then decreased at the end (60 DPH) in both males and females. We further found that auditory isolation from tutor songs alters developmental changes in the proportions of firing neurons both in males and females, and also changes those of burst neurons differently between males that sing and females that do not. Taken together, these findings suggest that NCM neurons develop their neurophysiological properties depending on auditory experiences during the sensory song learning period, which underlies memory formation for song learning in males and song discrimination in females.

Highlights

  • Songbirds learn to sing by imitating adult conspecific vocalizations during development in a way that resembles how humans learn to speak

  • We measured the Spontaneous firing rate (SFR) of each NCM neuron and found that the majority of recorded neurons (64%, 94/145 neurons) exhibited spontaneous firing (Figure 1A, data pooled from all age and sex), which contrasted with previous reports in adults, where the majority of NCM neurons showed no spontaneous firing activity (Dagostin et al, 2015)

  • We found that distributions of silent and firing neurons differed significantly between ages (20, 40, 60 days post-hatching (DPH), Fisher’s exact test, p = 0.0007), while SFR of firing neurons did not differ with age, sex, or those interactions (p > 0.05, two-way ANOVA; Supplementary Figure 1A)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Songbirds learn to sing by imitating adult conspecific vocalizations during development in a way that resembles how humans learn to speak. We showed that a specific fraction of NCM neurons in juveniles responded exclusively to tutor songs after learning from tutors in freely behaving conditions, and this selectivity was reduced by blocking local GABA inhibitory function, suggesting that early auditory experiences shape NCM neuronal circuits to form tutor song memories by recruiting GABA inhibitory circuits (Yanagihara and Yazaki-Sugiyama, 2016). Intrinsic properties, including spontaneous activity of NCM neurons and other changes during the sensory learning period resulting from auditory experiences, have not yet been examined, especially in females. To examine neuronal activity in the NCM during the sensory learning period, we performed whole-cell patchclamp recordings from brain slices from male and female juvenile zebra finches. The developmental trajectory of neuronal type proportions and effects of auditory experiences on those trajectories were found to differ between juvenile males and females

MATERIALS AND METHODS
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DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT

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