4.3 Article

Practice makes plasticity: 10-Hz rTMS enhances LTP-like plasticity in musicians and athletes

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEURAL CIRCUITS
Volume 17, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fncir.2023.1124221

Keywords

repetitive transcranial magnetic simulation; plasticity; LTP; motor-evoked potential (MEP); D-cycloserine (D-CYC; partial NMDA receptor agonist); NMDA-receptor

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Musicians and athletes demonstrate use-dependent plasticity in the brain as a result of intensive motor training. This study found that motor practice and learning increase the responsiveness of the brain to plasticity-inducing interventions, such as rTMS. These findings have implications for learning paradigms and recovery from neurological/mental disorders.
Motor skill learning has been linked to functional and structural changes in the brain. Musicians and athletes undergo intensive motor training through the practice of an instrument or sport and have demonstrated use-dependent plasticity that may be subserved by long-term potentiation (LTP) processes. We know less, however, about whether the brains of musicians and athletes respond to plasticity-inducing interventions, such as repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), differently than those without extensive motor training. In a pharmaco-rTMS study, we evaluated motor cortex excitability before and after an rTMS protocol in combination with oral administration of D-cycloserine (DCS) or placebo. In a secondary covariate analysis, we compared results between self-identified musicians and athletes (M&As) and non-musicians and athletes (non-M&As). Three TMS measures of cortical physiology were used to evaluate plasticity. We found that M&As did not have higher baseline corticomotor excitability. However, a plasticity-inducing protocol (10-Hz rTMS in combination with DCS) strongly facilitated motor-evoked potentials (MEPs) in M&As, but only weakly in non-M&As. Placebo and rTMS produced modest facilitation in both groups. Our findings suggest that motor practice and learning create a neuronal environment more responsive to plasticity-inducing events, including rTMS. These findings may explain one factor contributing to the high inter-individual variability found with MEP data. Greater capacity for plasticity holds implications for learning paradigms, such as psychotherapy and rehabilitation, by facilitating LTP-like activation of key networks, including recovery from neurological/mental disorders.

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