[PDF][PDF] Early seizures prematurely unsilence auditory synapses to disrupt thalamocortical critical period plasticity

H Sun, AE Takesian, TT Wang, JJ Lippman-Bell… - Cell reports, 2018 - cell.com
H Sun, AE Takesian, TT Wang, JJ Lippman-Bell, TK Hensch, FE Jensen
Cell reports, 2018cell.com
Heightened neural excitability in infancy and childhood results in increased susceptibility to
seizures. Such early-life seizures are associated with language deficits and autism that can
result from aberrant development of the auditory cortex. Here, we show that early-life
seizures disrupt a critical period (CP) for tonotopic map plasticity in primary auditory cortex
(A1). We show that this CP is characterized by a prevalence of" silent," NMDA-receptor
(NMDAR)-only, glutamate receptor synapses in auditory cortex that become" unsilenced" …
Summary
Heightened neural excitability in infancy and childhood results in increased susceptibility to seizures. Such early-life seizures are associated with language deficits and autism that can result from aberrant development of the auditory cortex. Here, we show that early-life seizures disrupt a critical period (CP) for tonotopic map plasticity in primary auditory cortex (A1). We show that this CP is characterized by a prevalence of "silent," NMDA-receptor (NMDAR)-only, glutamate receptor synapses in auditory cortex that become "unsilenced" due to activity-dependent AMPA receptor (AMPAR) insertion. Induction of seizures prior to this CP occludes tonotopic map plasticity by prematurely unsilencing NMDAR-only synapses. Further, brief treatment with the AMPAR antagonist NBQX following seizures, prior to the CP, prevents synapse unsilencing and permits subsequent A1 plasticity. These findings reveal that early-life seizures modify CP regulators and suggest that therapeutic targets for early post-seizure treatment can rescue CP plasticity.
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