Neurosci Res. 2025 Apr 4:S0168-0102(25)00068-9. doi: 10.1016/j.neures.2025.03.009. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
Most offspring are born helpless, requiring intense caregiving from parents especially during the first few days of neonatal life. For many species, infant cries are a primary signal used by parents to provide caregiving. Previously we and others documented how maternal left auditory cortex rapidly becomes sensitized to pup calls over hours of parental experience, enabled by oxytocin. The speed and robustness of this maternal plasticity suggests cortical pre-tuning or initial bias for pup call stimulus features. Here we examine the circuit basis of left-lateralized tuning to vocalization features with whole-cell recordings in brain slices. We found that layer 2/3 pyramidal cells of female left auditory cortex show selective suppression of inhibitory inputs with repeated stimulation at the fundamental pup call rate (inter-stimulus interval ~150 msec) in pup-naïve females and expanded with maternal experience. However, optogenetic stimulation of cortical inhibitory cells showed that inputs from somatostatin-positive and oxytocin-receptor-expressing interneurons were less suppressed at these rates. This suggested that disynaptic inhibition rather than monosynaptic depression was a major mechanism underlying pre-tuning of cortical excitatory neurons, confirmed with simulations. Thus cortical interneuron specializations can augment neuroplasticity mechanisms to ensure fast appropriate caregiving in response to infant cries.
PMID:40189152 | DOI:10.1016/j.neures.2025.03.009
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