4.5 Article

Mapping the vocal circuitry of Alston's singing mouse with pseudorabies virus

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY
Volume 530, Issue 12, Pages 2075-2099

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cne.25321

Keywords

PRV; Scotinomys teguina; singing mice; vocalization

Funding

  1. Center for Neuroanatomy and Neurotropic Viruses (CNNV) [NIH P40 OD010996, NIH 5R01NS113071, NSF IOS-1457350]

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This study reveals the role of anatomical structures in the vocalization behavior of Alston's singing mouse by injecting tracers into different muscles. The results show that these neural circuits are consistent with the general patterns of vocal circuitry in vertebrates and with the findings derived from primate literature.
Vocalizations are often elaborate, rhythmically structured behaviors. Vocal motor patterns require close coordination of neural circuits governing the muscles of the larynx, jaw, and respiratory system. In the elaborate vocalization of Alston's singing mouse (Scotinomys teguina) each note of its rapid, frequency-modulated trill is accompanied by equally rapid modulation of breath and gape. To elucidate the neural circuitry underlying this behavior, we introduced the polysynaptic retrograde neuronal tracer pseudorabies virus (PRV) into the cricothyroid and digastricus muscles, which control frequency modulation and jaw opening, respectively. Each virus singly labels ipsilateral motoneurons (nucleus ambiguus for cricothyroid, and motor trigeminal nucleus for digastricus). We find that the two isogenic viruses heavily and bilaterally colabel neurons in the gigantocellular reticular formation, a putative central pattern generator. The viruses also show strong colabeling in compartments of the midbrain including the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray and the parabrachial nucleus, two structures strongly implicated in vocalizations. In the forebrain, regions important to social cognition and energy balance both exhibit extensive colabeling. This includes the paraventricular and arcuate nuclei of the hypothalamus, the lateral hypothalamus, preoptic area, extended amygdala, central amygdala, and the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. Finally, we find doubly labeled neurons in M1 motor cortex previously described as laryngeal, as well as in the prelimbic cortex, which indicate these cortical regions play a role in vocal production. The progress of both viruses is broadly consistent with vertebrate-general patterns of vocal circuitry, as well as with circuit models derived from primate literature.

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