The Journal of Neuroscience, February 1, 2002, 22(3):901-911
Development of Individual Axon Arbors in a Thalamocortical
Circuit Necessary for Song Learning in Zebra Finches
Soumya
Iyengar and
Sarah W.
Bottjer
Department of Biology, University of Southern California, Los
Angeles, California 90089-2520
Individual axon arbors within developing neural circuits are
remodeled during restricted sensitive periods, leading to the emergence
of precise patterns of connectivity and specialized adaptive behaviors.
In male zebra finches, the circuit connecting the medial dorsolateral
nucleus of the thalamus (DLM) and its cortical target, the lateral
magnocellular nucleus of the anterior neostriatum (lMAN), is crucial
for the acquisition of a normal vocal pattern during the sensitive
period for song learning. The shell subregion of lMAN as well as the
entire terminal field of DLM axons within lMAN undergo a striking
increase in overall volume during early stages of vocal learning
followed by an equally substantial decrease by adulthood, by which time
birds have acquired stable song patterns. Because the total number of
DLM neurons remains stable throughout this period, the dramatic changes
within the overall DLM
lMAN circuit are presumably attributable to
dynamic rearrangements at the level of individual DLM axon arbors over the course of vocal learning. To study such rearrangements directly, we
reconstructed individual DLM axon arbors in three dimensions at
different stages during vocal learning. Unlike axon arbors in other
model systems, in which the number of branches increases during
development, DLM arbors are unusual in that they have the greatest
number of branches at the onset of vocal learning and undergo
large-scale retraction during the sensitive period for song learning.
Decreases in the degree of overlap between DLM arbors apparently
contribute to the increased overall volume of the DLM
lMAN circuit
during vocal learning. These developmental changes in DLM axon arbors
occur at the height of the sensitive period for vocal learning, and
hence may represent either a morphological correlate of song learning
or a necessary prerequisite for acquisition of song.
Key words:
axons; songbirds; vocal learning; topographic; remodeling; terminals
Copyright © 2002 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/02/223901-11$05.00/0