4.7 Article

Visual Deprivation Selectively Reduces Thalamic Reticular Nucleus-Mediated Inhibition of the Auditory Thalamus in Adults

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 42, Issue 42, Pages 7921-7930

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2032-21.2022

Keywords

adult plasticity; cortical plasticity; cross-modal plasticity; inhibitory plasticity; MGB; TRN

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health
  2. [R01-EY-022720]
  3. [R01-DC-018790]

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Sensory loss leads to plastic changes in the inhibitory synaptic transmission in the thalamus, supporting cross-modal plasticity in the brain. These plastic changes occur at the level of the thalamus and involve increased neurotransmitter release and reduced short-term inhibition. These findings have important implications for understanding sensory processing and adaptive plasticity.
Sensory loss leads to widespread cross-modal plasticity across brain areas to allow the remaining senses to guide behavior. While mul-timodal sensory interactions are often attributed to higher-order sensory areas, cross-modal plasticity has been observed at the level of synaptic changes even across primary sensory cortices. In particular, vision loss leads to widespread circuit adaptation in the primary auditory cortex (A1) even in adults. Here we report using mice of both sexes in which cross-modal plasticity occurs even earlier in the sensory-processing pathway at the level of the thalamus in a modality-selective manner. A week of visual deprivation reduced inhibitory synaptic transmission from the thalamic reticular nucleus (TRN) to the primary auditory thalamus (MGBv) without changes to the pri-mary visual thalamus (dLGN). The plasticity of TRN inhibition to MGBv was observed as a reduction in postsynaptic gain and short-term depression. There was no observable plasticity of the cortical feedback excitatory synaptic transmission from the primary visual cortex to dLGN or TRN and A1 to MGBv, which suggests that the visual deprivation-induced plasticity occurs predominantly at the level of thalamic inhibition. We provide evidence that visual deprivation-induced change in the short-term depression of TRN inhibi-tion to MGBv involves endocannabinoid CB1 receptors. TRN inhibition is considered critical for sensory gating, selective attention, and multimodal performances; hence, its plasticity has implications for sensory processing. Our results suggest that selective disinhibition and altered short-term dynamics of TRN inhibition in the spared thalamic nucleus support cross-modal plasticity in the adult brain.

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