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The Journal of Neuroscience, November 1, 2000, 20(21):8218-8226
Developmental Changes in Eye-Blink Conditioning and Neuronal
Activity in the Inferior Olive
Daniel A.
Nicholson and
John H.
Freeman Jr
Department of Psychology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242
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ABSTRACT |
Neuronal activity was recorded in the dorsal accessory inferior
olive in infant rats during classical conditioning of the eye-blink
response. The percentage and amplitude of eye-blink conditioned
responses (CRs) increased as a function of age. The magnitude of the
neuronal response to the unconditioned stimulus (US) decreased with
age. There were also age-specific modifications of US-elicited inferior
olive neuronal activity during paired trials in which a conditioned
eye-blink response was performed. The results indicate that the
development of the conditioned eye-blink response may depend on dynamic
interactions between multiple developmental processes within the
eye-blink circuitry. Differences in the functional maturity of
olivo-cerebellar pathways may limit the induction of plasticity in the
cerebellum and thereby limit the development of eye-blink conditioned responses.
Key words:
ontogeny; brainstem; olive; learning; conditioning; eyeblink
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INTRODUCTION |
Much is known regarding the
developmental changes in the neurophysiological mechanisms of learning
in Aplysia californica (Carew, 1989 ; Marcus and Carew,
1998 ), but there have been few neurophysiological studies of learning
in developing mammals (Freeman and Nicholson, 2000 ). Most of what is
known about the time course of mammalian developmental changes in
learning and neural function comes from correlations between the
ontogeny of particular learned responses and the progression of
anatomical maturation of the neural systems underlying these learned
responses in adults (Green and Stanton, 1989 ; Diamond, 1990 ; Freeman
and Stanton, 1991 ; Rudy, 1992 ; Stanton et al., 1992 ; Hunt and Campbell,
1997 ; Stanton, 2000 ). Elucidation of the specific developmental
mechanisms of learning will require the use of various
neurophysiological techniques and consideration of the dynamic
interactions between multiple developmental processes within a well
characterized neural circuit (Freeman and Nicholson, 2000 ; Stanton,
2000 ).
Studying the classically conditioned eye-blink response in infant rats
provides a unique opportunity to examine the relationship between the
neural maturation of an extensively characterized neural circuit
(Lavond et al., 1993 ; Thompson and Krupa, 1994 ; Steinmetz, 1998 ) and
the ontogeny of associative learning (Stanton et al., 1992 ; Stanton and
Freeman, 1999 ; Stanton, 2000 ). The parameters that influence the rate
and strength of eye-blink conditioning have also been characterized
extensively, which facilitates both the design of experiments and the
interpretation of results (Gormezano et al., 1962 , 1983 ; Gormezano,
1966 ).
The cerebellum, the pontine nuclei, and the inferior olive are
essential components of the neural circuitry underlying the eye-blink
conditioned response (CR) in adult organisms (Lavond et al., 1993 ;
Thompson and Krupa, 1994 ; Steinmetz, 1998 ). Electrophysiological analyses found that the inferior olive responds most reliably to
stimuli that are commonly used as unconditioned stimuli in eye-blink
conditioning, such as air puffs, taps, and shocks (Armstrong et al.,
1968 ; Armstrong, 1974 ; Gellman et al., 1983 ; Sears and Steinmetz, 1991 ;
Weiss et al., 1993 ). Lesions of the dorsal accessory inferior olive
impair retention and acquisition of the eye-blink CR (McCormick et al.,
1985 ; Yeo et al., 1986 ; Mintz et al., 1994 ). Furthermore, it has been
demonstrated using lesions, electrical stimulation, and pharmacology
that the climbing fibers from the inferior olive to the cerebellum
provide the necessary and sufficient US information to support learning
of the eye-blink CR (McCormick et al., 1985 ; Mauk et al., 1986 ;
Steinmetz et al., 1989 ; Harvey and Romano, 1993 ; Du and Harvey, 1997 ).
The olivo-cerebellar system has also been implicated as a critical
component in adaptation of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (Ito, 1984 ;
Raymond et al., 1996 ) and load compensation (Gilbert and Thach, 1977 ;
Thach et al., 1992 ).
Developmental changes within the olivo-cerebellar circuit (Crepel,
1971 , 1972 , 1974 ; Altman, 1972 ; Berry and Bradley, 1976 , 1982; Gardette
et al., 1985 ) could play a pivotal role in the ontogeny of eye-blink
conditioning. Freeman and Nicholson (2000) found an age-related
increase in neuronal activity in the cerebellar interpositus nucleus
after the onset of the conditioned and unconditioned stimuli during
eye-blink conditioning in infant rats. It was proposed that the weaker
response in the interpositus neurons to the US in younger rats might
affect the rate and strength of eye-blink conditioning by limiting the
induction of cerebellar neuronal plasticity.
This report describes the results of an examination of stimulus-evoked
and learning-related modifications of neuronal activity in the dorsal
accessory inferior olive (the US pathway) of infant rats during
eye-blink conditioning and US-alone trials.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Subjects. The subjects were 12 Long-Evans rat pups
trained on either postnatal day (PND) 17-18 (n = 6) or
PND24-25 (n = 6). The electrode assembly of one
PND17-18 rat pup was damaged between the pretraining session and the
first session of paired training, and one PND17-18 did not receive
US-alone trials during the first session of paired training. The rats
were housed in the animal colony in Spence Laboratories at the
University of Iowa. The rats were maintained on a 12 hr light/dark
photoperiod, with light onset at 6:30 A.M.
Surgery. The rat pups were given intraperitoneal injections
of ketamine (60 mg/kg) and xylazine (7.5 mg/kg) for anesthesia. The
rat's head was positioned in an infant stereotaxic head holder and
aligned in three planes, to bring it into the orientation required for
placement of the electrodes. The rats were fitted with differential EMG
electrodes that were implanted in the left eyelid muscle (orbicularis
oculi) and a ground electrode was attached to a stainless steel skull
hook. The EMG electrode leads terminated in gold pins in a plastic
connector, which was secured to the skull with dental acrylic. A
bipolar stimulating electrode (for delivering the shock US) was
implanted subdermally, immediately caudal to the left eye. The bipolar
electrode terminated in a plastic connector that was secured to the
skull by dental acrylic.
A bundle of eight insulated stainless steel electrodes (25 µm) was
implanted in the right dorsal accessory inferior olive (DAO) of each
rat under electrophysiological and stereotaxic guidance. The
stereotaxic coordinates for the DAO were taken from lambda (PND16: anterior-posterior (AP) = 2.1 mm,
medial-lateral (ML) = 0 0.5 mm, and
dorsal-ventral (DV) = 8.8 mm; PND23: AP = 2.4 mm,
ML = 0.4 mm, DV = 9.3). While the electrode was lowered to the inferior olive, the cerebellar cortex and cerebellar deep nuclei
could be identified by their characteristic neuronal firing patterns.
The inferior olive was ~4-4.5 mm ventral to the cerebellar deep
nuclei and was identified by its characteristic low-frequency discharge
of single action potentials occasionally followed by bursts of two to
five smaller "wavelets" with a total duration ranging from 3 to
~10 msec (Armstrong and Harvey, 1968 ; Armstrong et al., 1968 ; Crill,
1970 ; Llinas et al., 1974 ; Headley and Lodge, 1976 ; Gellman et al.,
1983 ; Sears and Steinmetz, 1991 ; Weiss et al., 1993 ). The electrodes
were held in place by a microelectrode connector and dental acrylic
applied to the skull. The surgical site was closed with sutures on both
sides of the electrode plug. The connectors for the EMG electrodes,
bipolar stimulating electrode, and microwire electrodes were connected
to lightweight cables that allowed the rats to move freely during conditioning.
Identification of inferior olive neurons. While the
electrode was lowered to the inferior olive, the neuronal activity was monitored to recognize its characteristic firing pattern (Armstrong et
al., 1968 ; Armstrong and Harvey, 1968 ; Crill, 1970 ; Llinas et al.,
1974 ; Headley and Lodge, 1976 ; Gellman et al., 1983 ; Sears and
Steinmetz, 1991 ; Weiss et al., 1993 ), which has been likened to
"popcorn popping" (Gellman et al., 1983 ). Waveforms could be isolated and overlaid on the digital oscilloscope to display the consistent shape of the olivary neuronal potential, occasionally followed by variable wavelets. Rarely (one PND17-18 rat and two PND24-25), lemniscal fiber potentials were encountered and were easily
distinguished from inferior olive neurons by their very short duration
action potentials, which were never followed by small wavelets and
often were of greater amplitude than inferior olive neurons (Crill,
1970 ). Moreover, the lemniscal fiber potentials were usually only
transiently present during surgery. In contrast, the activity of
identified DAO neurons was generally present throughout training.
Conditioning apparatus. The conditioning apparatus consisted
of an electrically shielded small-animal sound attenuation chamber (BRS/LVE, Laurel, MD). Within the sound attenuation chamber was a
small-animal operant chamber (BRS/LVE) where the rats were kept during
conditioning. One wall of the operant chamber was fitted with two
speakers that independently produced tones of up to 130 db sound
pressure level (SPL), with a frequency range of ~1000-9000 Hz. The
back wall of the sound attenuating chamber was equipped with a small
light. The electrode leads from the rat's headstage were connected to
peripheral equipment and a Pentium computer. Computer software
controlled the delivery of stimuli and the recording of eyelid EMG
activity. EMG activity was recorded differentially, filtered,
amplified, and integrated by equipment that was described in previous
studies (Stanton et al., 1992 ; Freeman et al., 1995a ,b ; Freeman and
Nicholson, 2000 ).
Conditioning procedure. The rat pups received training
sessions that consisted of 100 trials each. Three sessions were run for
each day of training, at ~4 hr intervals. During the first training
session, the rats were given unpaired presentations of a tone
conditioned stimulus (CS) (2.0 kHz, 300 msec, 85 dB SPL) and a
periorbital shock US (6 msec, 4 mA). The rats were then given
five training sessions, which consisted of 90 paired presentations of
the tone conditioned stimulus and the shock unconditioned stimulus, followed by 10 US-alone trials. In the paired condition, training sessions consisted of nine blocks of 10 trials of delay conditioning. Of these, nine trials involved pairings of the auditory CS and a 6 msec
periorbital-shock US, and one trial involved the pairing of the
auditory CS and a 1 msec periorbital-shock US. The CS coterminated with
the 1 and 6 msec US, yielding interstimulus intervals of 299 and 294 msec, respectively. Interspersed among the 10 US-alone trials were five
trials each involving the 1 msec US and the 6 msec US. Implementing the
1 msec US paired trials provided the opportunity to assess the
US-elicited activity of the DAO neurons at their shortest possible
latency (~8-9 msec) (Armstrong et al., 1968 ; Armstrong, 1974 ; Crill,
1970 ; Cook and Wiesendanger, 1976 ). Trials were separated by a variable
intertrial interval that averaged 30 sec (range = 18-42 sec). CRs
were defined as responses that crossed a threshold of 0.4 units
(amplified and integrated arbitrary units) above baseline during the CS
period after 80 msec. Behavioral data were examined from computer
records of EMG responses. Previous studies have shown that the paired
training protocol used in this study established associative eye-blink
CRs (Stanton et al., 1992 ; Freeman et al., 1993 ).
Stimulation procedure. A subset of rats at each age
(n = 2 per group) was given electrical stimulation
through the recording electrodes. The stimulating current was a single
50 µsec pulse starting at 5 µA and steadily incremented in 10 µA
current steps until EMG responses or movements could be detected, or
until 1500 µA. Eyelid EMG responses were amplified, filtered, and
recorded for off-line analysis. Movements of other body parts were
observed visually.
Neuronal recording procedure. The activity of each microwire
electrode was initially passed through a unity gain JFET preamplifier (NB Labs, Denison, TX). The outputs of the JFET preamplifier were fed
into an eight-channel programmable amplifier (Lynx-8), filtered between
300 and 6000 Hz, and amplified at a gain of 10,000. The outputs of the
amplifiers were fed into a computer-controlled acquisition system at 20 kHz per channel (Datawave Technologies, Workbench-32), where
thresholding was used to detect and extract waveforms of units with
signal-to-noise ratios of at least 3:1. The waveforms were saved as
separate 32 point data chunks. Two voltage thresholds were used.
Waveforms that crossed the lower threshold but did not cross the upper
threshold within the 32 sample points were recorded to computer disk.
The multiple unit records were then separated using custom software.
This software displays all of the waveforms that were recorded during a
particular data collection period (usually a training session). The
user may examine any individual spike waveform that was recorded during the training session. A template-matching program was used to identify
all of the spikes with similar waveform characteristics. This technique
effectively isolated single units from multiunit records (Freeman and
Nicholson, 1999 , 2000 ).
Data analysis. The behavioral data were examined for each
training session. Repeated measures ANOVAs were performed for the CR
percentage, CR amplitude, CR latency, unconditioned response (UR)
percentage, and UR amplitude.
Peristimulus-time histograms of the firing rates of each unit were
created for the entire period of the conditioning trials (1 sec) for
the pretraining, first, and fifth training sessions. It was expected
that most units in the DAO would fire action potentials in response to
the US (Armstrong et al., 1968 ; Crill, 1970 ; Armstrong, 1974 ; Cook and
Wiesendanger, 1976 ; Gellman et al., 1983 , 1985 ; Sears and Steinmetz,
1991 ; Weiss et al., 1993 ). The neuronal activity during the US period
was analyzed using Wilcoxon signed rank tests (Kubota et al., 1996 ;
Freeman and Nicholson, 1999 , 2000 ). The onset latency and peak latency
of each single unit was determined from individual unit histograms and
subjected to two-tailed t tests (p < 0.05) comparing between-group within-session differences and
within-group between-session differences. Separate analyses were
conducted for the peak and onset latencies for the 6 msec and 1 msec
paired trials and the 6 msec and 1 msec US-alone trials for the
unpaired pretraining session, and the first and fifth paired training
sessions. The post-US period (i.e., immediately after the offset of the
US) was divided into 10 msec intervals (10 for the US). The period
during the presentation of the US was not analyzed because of the
stimulation artifact.
Histology. On the day after training, the rats were killed
with a lethal injection of sodium pentobarbital (90 mg/kg) and transcardially perfused with 100 ml of physiological saline followed by
300 ml of 3% formalin. After perfusion, the brains were post-fixed in
the same fixative for a minimum of 24 hr and subsequently sectioned at
50 µm with a sliding microtome. Sections were then stained with
cresyl violet. The locations of the recording electrodes were confirmed
by examining serial sections.
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RESULTS |
Behavior
The rats trained on PND24-25 exhibited significantly greater CR
percentage and amplitude during sessions 3-5 than the rats that were
trained on PND17-18 (Fig. 1). The
average onset latency of the CR was lower in the rats trained on
PND24-25 than in the rats trained on PND17-18 during sessions 3-5.
These data replicate the behavioral results of previous studies and
indicate that the eye-blink conditioned response develops substantially
between PND17 and PND24 (Stanton et al., 1992 ; Freeman et al., 1993 ,
1995a ,b ; Freeman and Nicholson, 2000 ). There were no differences in the amplitude or percentage of the unconditioned response between the two
age groups throughout training. This result indicates that the
developmental change in conditioned response acquisition was not caused
by a developmental change in performance of the eye-blink response
(Stanton et al., 1992 ; Freeman et al., 1993 , 1995a ,b ; Freeman and
Nicholson, 2000 ).

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Figure 1.
Mean (±SEM) percentage of conditioned responses
from infant rats trained on PND17-18 ( ) and PND24-25 ( ) across
the five sessions of paired training (*significant group
differences).
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The behavioral data were evaluated statistically by ANOVA. Analyses of
both CR percentage and amplitude yielded significant interactions
involving the group and training session factors (CR percentage:
F(4,36) = 8.226, p < 0.02; CR amplitude: F(4,36) = 3.12, p < 0.037). Post hoc tests (Tukey's HSD)
revealed a significantly greater percentage and amplitude of CRs for
the rats trained on PND24-25 relative to the rats trained on PND17-18
during sessions 3-5 (all comparisons, p < 0.05). The
onset latency of the CR was examined for trials from sessions 3-5
because most of the rats failed to produce CRs during test trials
before session 3. The ANOVA revealed a significant effect of the group
factor (F(1,9) = 6.793, p < 0.03), which was attributable to lower CR
latencies in the rats trained on PND24-25 (means: PND17-18 = 235.9 msec; PND24-25 = 155.8 msec).
Electrode placement
All of the units used in the data analysis of this experiment were
recorded from the rostromedial portion of the right DAO. Of the 12 electrode bundles, 11 were placed in the rostromedial portion of the
DAO, and one was placed in the rostrolateral portion (Fig.
2).

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Figure 2.
Drawing of coronal sections of the rat brain with
labels indicating the placement of the tips of the electrode bundles in
the right DAO of infant rats trained on PND17-18 (white
circles) or PND24-25 (gray circles).
Numbers in each drawing indicate the approximate
distance from lambda (in millimeters).
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Inferior olive neuronal activity
During the course of training, three electrode wires in one
PND17-18 rat pup and two electrode wires in one PND24-25 rat pup exhibited lemniscal fiber potentials, which were easily identified by
their waveform characteristics (see Materials and Methods) (Crill,
1970 ). Further investigation during off-line analysis confirmed that
these potentials were quite unlike any of the rest of the neuronal
waveforms, having shorter duration depolarizations, very small and
brief, if any, valleys after the action potential peak voltage, and
higher peak voltage values (amplitude). It was concluded that these
potentials were from medial lemniscal axons, or at least not inferior
olive neurons, by their distinct firing characteristics, their presence
on only a few trials in each of the two rats, and their clear
differences in waveforms from all other inferior olive neurons, and
therefore they were not included in any of the analyses. The numbers of
units at PND17-18 were 182, 133, and 163 for pretraining, paired
session 1, and paired session 5, respectively. The numbers of units at
PND24-25 were 195, 181, and 205 for pretraining, paired session 1, and
paired session 5, respectively.
Figure 3 shows the activity of
representative single units that were recorded during the US-alone
trials in the pretraining session on PND17 (top) and PND24
(bottom). Note that almost all activity occurs after US
onset, with most of the activity timelocked to within 100 msec after US
onset. Also, the response in the PND17 neuron was more consistently
timed, more robust, and peaked sooner after the US than in the PND24
neuron. Notice that the PND17 neuron in Figure 3 displays a bimodal
distribution, sometimes firing at a similar latency to the PND24
neuron, and other times firing ~10-20 msec earlier. As can be seen
in Figure 4A, the peak
latency of olivary neurons in PND17 rat pups is significantly shorter than neurons in PND24 rat pups (t = 7.545, p < 0.001) (Table 1). There was no age difference in onset latency. The age-related differences in US-elicited activity are seen most clearly in the mean
activity of all the units (Fig. 4B), where the peak
bin count is higher and occurs earlier in PND17 neurons. The PND17-18
group data also exhibit a bimodal distribution similar to the unit in Figure 3.

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Figure 3.
Histograms and raster plots of representative
units recorded in the DAO during US-alone trials in pretraining from
PND17 (top) and PND24 (bottom) infant
rats. The arrowhead and vertical line at
0.6 sec indicate the point in the trial when US offset occurred. The
spike overlays are 1.6 msec (each waveform is 32 data points at 20 kHz).
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Figure 4.
A, The distribution of peak
latencies of responses to the US in DAO neurons from PND17
(black bars) and PND24 (gray bars)
rat pups during US-alone trials in pretraining. B, Mean
neuronal activity during the entire trial length (1 sec) for all of the
single units recorded from the DAO on PND17 (black line)
and PND24 (gray line) during pretraining US-alone
trials. Arrowheads indicate the offset of the US.
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The neuronal activity during US-alone trials in the first paired
session continued the trend established in the pretraining session
(Table 1). However, the only statistically reliable difference between
the two age groups on US-alone trials was the earlier peak latency in
PND17 neurons after the 1 msec US (t = 2.345, p < 0.02). Figure 5
shows representative single units that were recorded during the paired
trials in session 1. Note that the neurons at both ages appeared to
have more consistently timed responses to the US compared with the
pretraining session, but the PND17 neuron (top panel)
peaked earlier and more robustly. There was an age-related increase in
onset (t = 4.451, p < 0.001) and peak
(t = 9.731, p < 0.001) latencies for
the 6 msec paired trials, and the onset (t = 4.053, p < 0.001) and peak (t = 4.429, p < 0.001) latencies for the 1 msec paired trials
(Table 1). Figure 6 shows the mean
neuronal activity of all units in both ages, which exhibits the same
pattern as the single units in Figure 5. The activity elicited by the
CS onset is likely related to movement during the unconditioned startle
response to the tone (Mortimer, 1973 ; Barmack and Hess, 1980 ; Stanton
et al., 1992 ). Comparison of the tone-evoked startle-related
single-unit data in this experiment and the tone-evoked startle-related
Purkinje cell complex spikes in monkeys (Mortimer, 1973 ) reveals an
impressive correspondence between the monkey and the rat. There is no
clear explanation for why the neuronal response is greater in the PND17 rat pups, because rats at both ages exhibit the same percentage of
startle responses to the tone (Stanton et al., 1992 ). However, there is
a clear developmental decrease in tone-evoked startle-related DAO
activity (Figs. 6, 8A), which is consistent with the
hypothesized source of the developmental difference in US-elicited DAO
activity (see Discussion). Moreover, the lack of tone-evoked DAO
activity in the rabbit (Sears and Steinmetz, 1991 ) may be related to
the absence of the startle response in the rabbit (Gormezano, 1966 ). A
significantly greater percentage of neurons was excited during the
first 100 msec of the US period in the rats trained on PND24 relative
to the rats trained on PND17 during the 1 msec US-alone ( 2 = 8.41, p < 0.01, 314 units) and the 6 msec US-alone trials
( 2 = 4.66, p < 0.05).
There were no differences in the percentages of neurons excited during
the paired trials.

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Figure 5.
Histograms and raster plots of representative
units recorded in the DAO during session 1 of paired training from
infant rats trained on PND17 (top) and PND24
(bottom). The arrowheads and
vertical line at 0.6 sec indicate the points in the
trial when CS onset and US offset occurred. The spike overlays are 1.6 msec.
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Figure 6.
Mean neuronal activity during the entire trial
length (1 sec) for all of the single units recorded from the DAO from
PND17 (black line) and PND24 (gray
line) rat pups during 6 msec paired trials in session 1 of
paired training. Arrowheads indicate the onset of the CS
and the offset of the US.
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During the fifth session of training, there were significant
age-related increases in the onset (t = 6.574, p < 0.001) and peak (t = 9.927, p < 0.001) latencies in the 6 msec paired trials; onset (t = 4.79, p < 0.001) and peak
(t = 5.453, p < 0.001) latencies in
the 1 msec paired trials; onset (t = 3.702, p < 0.001) and peak (t = 3.201, p = 0.001) latencies in the 6 msec US-alone trials; and
onset (t = 2.401, p < 0.02) latencies
for the 1 msec US-alone trials (Table 1). Figure
7 shows representative single units for
PND18 (top two panels) and PND25 rat pups (bottom two
panels). The top of each panel is taken from trials on which the
animal did not perform an eye-blink CR; the bottom of each panel is
taken from trials on which the animal performed an eye-blink CR. Note that the time-locked relationship to the US is maintained in the PND18
neuron during CR trials but appears to be desynchronized or delayed in
the PND25 neuron. Figure
8B shows that the
distribution of peak latencies in PND25 neurons appears to be skewed
toward longer latencies after US offset, with a flatter shape than the distribution for the PND18 neurons.

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Figure 7.
Top two panels, Histogram and
raster plots of a representative unit recorded in the DAO during
session 5 of paired training from an infant rat trained on PND18 during
trials in which no eye-blink CR was performed (top) and
during trials in which an eye-blink CR was performed
(bottom). Bottom two panels, Histogram
and raster plot of a representative unit recorded in the DAO during
session 5 of paired training from an infant rat trained on PND25 during
trials in which no eye-blink CR was performed (top) and
during trials in which an eye-blink CR was performed
(bottom). The arrowheads and
vertical line at 0.6 sec indicate the points in the
trial when CS onset and US offset occurred. The spike overlays are
1.6 msec.
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Figure 8.
A, Mean neuronal activity during
the entire trial length (1 sec) for all of the single units recorded
from the DAO on PND17-18 (left) and PND24-25
(right) in session 5 of paired training. In each plot,
the gray line is a plot of DAO mean activity during
trials in which an eye-blink CR was not performed, and the black
line is a plot of DAO mean activity during trials in which an
eye-blink CR was performed. Arrowheads indicate the
onset of the CS and the offset of the US. B, The
distribution of peak latencies of responses to the US in DAO neurons
from PND18 (black bars) and PND25 (gray
bars) rat pups during paired trials in session 5.
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Greater percentages of PND18 neurons were excited by the US during the
1 msec paired trials ( 2 = 6.117, p < 0.02, 368 units) and the 6 msec US-alone trials ( 2 = 5.756, p < 0.02)
compared with PND25 neurons. Figure 8A shows the mean
neuronal activity from all units in both ages. Note the more
concentrated and shorter peak latency during the non-CR trials in PND25
neurons, and the lack of difference between trial types in the PND18
neurons. There also appears to be neuronal activity related to the
movement of the eyelid during CR trials in PND25 neurons (McCormick et
al., 1983 ), and the unconditioned startle-response to the tone in
PND17-18 neurons (Mortimer, 1973 ; Stanton et al., 1992 ).
Within-group comparisons between sessions 1 and 5 among PND17-18 units
revealed a significantly later onset latency during the 6 msec paired
trials in session 5 (t = 3.576, p < 0.01). Within-group comparisons between sessions 1 and 5 among
PND24-25 units reveal a significantly later onset (t = 6.938, p < 0.01) and peak (t = 3.397, p < 0.01) during 6 msec paired trials; significantly later onset (t = 3.21, p < 0.01) and
peak (t = 3.686, p < 0.01) latencies
during 1 msec paired trials; and a significantly later onset
(t = 3.069, p < 0.01) latency during 6 msec US-alone trials during session 5 (Table 1).
The high responsivity to the US in inferior olive neurons in PND17-18
and PND24-25 rat pups throughout training is consistent with previous
studies (Armstrong et al., 1968 ; Armstrong, 1974 ; Gellman et al., 1983 ,
1985 ; Sears and Steinmetz, 1991 ; Weiss et al., 1993 ). Moreover, the
relatively low spontaneous rate (<1 Hz) of firing during the brief
prestimulus baseline period (595 msec in pretraining and 300 msec for
paired CS-US trials) is consistent with other studies of DAO or
complex spike activity during eye-blink conditioning (Berthier and
Moore, 1986 ; Sears and Steinmetz, 1991 ; Kim et al., 1998 ). There are
three possible reasons for relatively low baseline firing during
conditioning trials. First, to minimize the amount of "noise" in
the behavioral and neuronal data, we waited until the rats were
completely still before a trial was initiated. Therefore, the data are
from selectively chosen conditioning trials when the animals' EMG
records were showing the least amount of activity. Second, the animals
develop a conditioned fear of the tone CS used in training, indicated
in both groups by conditioned suppression of a drinking response during
tone presentations in the training environment (Freeman et al., 1995a ).
The cerebellum may be contributing to the postural tone of a
"freezing" animal (Terzuolo and Terzian, 1953 ; Llinas, 1964 ; Manni
et al., 1964 ) and perhaps also providing a weak inhibition of inferior
olive activity through the GABAergic nucleo-olivary pathway (Nelson et
al., 1989 ; De Zeeuw et al., 1990 ; Fredette and Mugnaini, 1991 ), lowering the spontaneous firing rate compared with a decerebrate, anesthetized, or resting animal from which most spontaneous measures have been taken (Armstrong, 1974 ). Finally, the brief prestimulus baseline (300 msec in paired trials) may provide a poor sampling window
for estimating spontaneous activity in low-frequency neurons. However,
the range of spontaneous DAO activity in the present study was 0.2-3
Hz, which is consistent with previous studies (Armstrong et al., 1968 ;
Armstrong, 1974 ; Crill, 1970 ; Cook and Wiesendanger, 1976 ; Gellman et
al., 1983 , 1985 ; Sears and Steinmetz, 1991 ; Weiss et al., 1993 ).
It is possible that the synchronous neuronal ensemble response to the
US among DAO neurons at each age in the present study is attributable
to the spread of excitation via electrotonic coupling in the inferior
olive (Llinas et al., 1974 ; Sotelo et al., 1974 ; Llinas and Sasaki,
1989 ; Lang et al., 1999 ). Electrotonic coupling provides a means of
communication among olive neurons without the necessity of action
potentials and could therefore contribute to the time-locked
relationship to the US that most neurons exhibited.
Inferior olive stimulation
Eyelid responses were elicited in rats from both age groups by
stimulation of the inferior olive. After training, a 50 µsec square-pulse was delivered through the recording electrodes to assess
the possibility that direct olivary stimulation could lead to muscle
activity. The current started at 5 µA and was raised in steps of 10 µA until eyelid EMG activity or movement was detected (see Materials
and Methods). Current levels ranging from 200 to 850 µA elicited
eyelid EMG activity. No age-related differences in response-eliciting
current level were detected. As the current intensity was increased,
the amplitude of the eyelid response increased, and additional
responses were elicited. Responses elicited by inferior olive
stimulation other than eyelid movement included movement of the facial
musculature, nose, and eye (Boylls, 1978 ; Gellman et al., 1985 ; Mauk et
al., 1986 ; Steinmetz et al., 1989 ). At higher current levels (>900
µA), electrode placements that were too dorsal (e.g., ventral
gigantocellular reticular nucleus) or too ventral (e.g., principal and
medial accessory olive) elicited nonspecific head jerks or nothing at all.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Developmental changes were observed in eye-blink conditioning and
neuronal activity in the rostromedial region of the DAO. There was an
age-related increase in the rate and magnitude of eye-blink
conditioning, which replicated the results of previous studies (Stanton
et al., 1992 ; Freeman et al., 1993 , 1995a ,b ; Freeman and Nicholson,
2000 ). Several significant differences in neuronal activity in the DAO
were observed. First, the magnitude of the DAO activity elicited by the
US decreased with age. This developmental trend was first evident in
pretraining and remained throughout training (Figs.
4B, 6, 8A). Second, the latency of the peak response to the US increased with age in paired and US-alone trials. This developmental trend was also first evident in pretraining and remained throughout training (Table 1). Third, the age-related differences in the magnitude and timing of the neuronal response appear
to be the result of a more consistent and highly synchronized response
to the US in PND17-18 rat pups. Fourth, the synchrony of activity
among DAO neurons in PND17-18 rats was not modified during CR trials,
whereas the activity of DAO neurons in PND24-25 rats appeared to be
desynchronized or delayed during CR trials. The developmental trends in
US-elicited neuronal activity indicate that neurons in the DAO produce
a stronger and more synchronized response in younger rats.
The developmental changes in DAO activity may appear to be inconsistent
with our previous proposal that the ontogeny of eye-blink conditioning
depends on developmental changes in the induction of plasticity caused
by maturation of the US input to the cerebellar deep nuclei
(Freeman and Nicholson, 2000 ). However, the developmental changes in
neuronal activity in the inferior olive may reflect dynamic
interactions between multiple developmental processes within the
eye-blink circuitry. The idea that acquisition and maintenance of
conditioned responses in infants depend on dynamic interactions between
components of the eye-blink conditioning circuitry is consistent with
current models of the neural mechanisms of eye-blink conditioning in
adult organisms (Bartha et al., 1991 ; Bullock et al., 1994 ; Gluck et
al., 1995 ; Raymond et al., 1996 ; Mauk and Donegan, 1997 ; Moore and
Choi, 1997 ).
One of the most likely sites for dynamic interactions between
developmental processes within the learning circuitry is the projection
from the cerebellar deep nuclei to the inferior olive. A reasonable
mechanism for the developmental decrease in the neuronal response to
the US in the DAO is that the GABAergic nucleo-olivary connection
becomes more effective from PND17 to PND24 (Nelson et al., 1989 ; De
Zeeuw et al., 1990 ; Fredette and Mugnaini, 1991 ) (Fig.
9, 3).

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|
Figure 9.
Simplified diagram of possible sites of
developmental changes within the olivo-cerebellar circuit (see
Discussion for details).
|
|
A recent experiment by Lang et al. (1996) may provide insight into how
developmental changes in the nucleo-olivary pathway could contribute to
the developmental differences in eye-blink conditioning. By applying
the GABA antagonist picrotoxin to the inferior olive in adult animals,
Lang et al. (1996) were able to increase synchrony among complex spikes
in the cerebellar cortex. The same increase in synchrony occurred with
muscimol inactivation or chemical lesions of the cerebellar deep
nuclei, directly implicating the role of nucleo-olivary feedback in
complex spike synchrony. Lang et al. (1996) proposed that application
of picrotoxin to the inferior olive prevented the deep nuclei from
decoupling olive cells, which then spread excitation to other nearby
olive cells through electrotonic synapses within the olive (Llinas,
1974 ; Llinas et al., 1974 ; Fredette and Mugnaini, 1991 ). If there is a
developmental difference in the nucleo-olivary pathway, then the
functional decoupling of olive cells will occur less in the younger
rats, and the electrotonic spread of excitation among DAO cells will be
greater in PND17-18 rats, which will have the effect of increasing
magnitude and synchrony of the responses among DAO neurons. This is
exactly what was found in the DAO activity in the PND17-18 rats in the
present experiment.
The modifiability of neuronal firing within the inferior olive during
trials with eyelid CRs in PND24-25 rat pups is generally consistent
with past studies (Gilbert and Thach, 1977 ; Gellman et al., 1983 ;
McCormick et al., 1983 ; Berthier and Moore, 1986 ; Andersson and
Armstrong, 1987 ; Sears and Steinmetz, 1991 ; Hesslow and Ivarsson, 1996 ;
Horn et al., 1996 ; Kim et al., 1998 ; Apps and Lee, 1999 ) and provides
additional support for the idea that there are developmental changes in
the nucleo-olivary projections. The lack of CR-related inhibition of
the US-elicited response in PND17-18 neurons is consistent with the
lower level of CR-related neuronal activity in the cerebellar
interpositus nucleus at this age (Freeman and Nicholson, 2000 ). It is
possible that the broadened ensemble neuronal response during CR trials
(Fig. 8A) in PND24-25 neurons is related to the
functional decoupling of olive neurons by the nucleo-olivary projection
(Gellman et al., 1985 ; Sears and Steinmetz, 1991 ; Horn et al., 1996 ,
1998 ), which may have the effect of inhibiting or significantly
delaying an olivary response to the US. The presence of
desynchronization rather than nearly total inhibition of the DAO
response on CR trials (Sears and Steinmetz, 1991 ) in PND24-25 rat pups
may be attributable to the nature of the US used in the present study
(periorbital shock). Gellman et al. (1985) report that shock elicits a
less variable and shorter latency response in the inferior olive than air puffs or taps. The differences in stimulus-elicited responses in
the DAO provide a potential explanation for the discrepancy between the
present data and the data of Sears and Steinmetz (1991) , who used an
air puff US and found almost complete inhibition of DAO activity during
CRs. Alternatively, the relatively weaker CR-related modification of
DAO activity in PND24-25 rats may be attributable to immaturity of the
nucleo-olivary pathway at this age.
The modest CR-related activity in the DAO in P24-25 rats may be
attributable to either response production (Llinas and Welsh, 1993 ;
Welsh et al., 1995 ) or proprioception during an ongoing movement (Apps
and Lee, 1999 ). Gellman et al. (1985) reported that some olivary
neurons are responsive to proprioceptive stimuli during movement.
Gellman et al. (1985) also reported that 21% of olivary neurons show a
weak but notable modulation of their response during movement, which is
similar to our weak but notable activity during the CR in the PND24-25
rat pups. Apps and Lee (1999) found the excitability of some cerebellar
cortical responses (using Purkinje cell complex spikes as an index of
excitability) to be highest during the swing phase of a stepping
movement, whereas other cells demonstrate a higher excitability during
the stance phase of movement. They concluded that the regions of
cerebellar cortex with different levels of excitability during
different phases of movement may act to monitor climbing fiber inputs
at different times during movement. The results reported in the present experiment are consistent with these and other reports of olivary or
complex spike excitability during movement (Gilbert and Thach, 1977 ;
Berthier and Moore, 1986 ; Welsh et al., 1995 ).
Why is there a developmental increase in learning when there is a
developmental decrease in US-elicited activity in the DAO? The two most
likely points within the olivo-cerebellar circuitry where developmental
processes might limit induction of cerebellar plasticity, and therefore
limit learning, are the olivo-nuclear and olivo-cortical synapses (Fig.
9, 1 and 2). Although the responses of DAO
neurons to the US are greater in the younger rats, it may be that the
olivo-nuclear synapses have not fully matured (Fig. 9, 2).
Developmental changes in olivo-nuclear synaptic efficacy would produce
a weaker US input to the cerebellar interpositus nucleus and limit the
induction of cerebellar plasticity in younger rats. Indirect evidence
for this potential developmental process comes from a previous study,
which demonstrated that neurons in the interpositus nucleus of P17-18
rats exhibited a substantially lower magnitude response to the US than
the interpositus neurons of P24-25 rats (Freeman and Nicholson, 2000 ).
In addition, preliminary findings indicate that the amplitude of the
excitatory field potential in the interpositus nucleus produced by
stimulation of the inferior olive (Kitai et al., 1977 ; Delgado-Garcia
and Gruart, 1995 ) increases dramatically between PND17 and PND24
(D. A. Nicholson and J. H. Freeman, unpublished
observations). A developmental difference in synaptic efficacy of
olivo-nuclear synapses would also have the indirect effect of reducing
cerebellar inhibition of the DAO (as described above) (Fig. 9,
3).
Another contributing mechanism to the ontogeny of eye-blink
conditioning may be found in developmental changes in the synaptic physiology of the olivo-cortical pathway. If the connections between the climbing fibers of the inferior olive and the cerebellar cortex (Fig. 9, 1) are more robust than the climbing fiber input to
the interpositus nucleus (Fig. 9, 2) in PND17-18 rat pups,
then the stronger inhibitory action of the Purkinje cells (Ito et al., 1970 ; Ito and Simson, 1971 ) would further limit postsynaptic
excitation to climbing fiber input within the interpositus nucleus.
Previous neurophysiological studies provide indirect evidence for this putative developmental mechanism. For instance, the duration of the
postsynaptic response in Purkinje cells after stimulation of climbing
fibers shows a developmental decrease from PND5 to PND21 (Crepel, 1971 ,
1972 , 1974 ; Puro and Woodward, 1977a ,b ), and there is a developmental
decrease in the number of spikes in each complex spike (Crepel, 1971 ,
1974 ). The stronger Purkinje cell activation by climbing fibers in
younger animals could limit the induction of learning-related
plasticity in the interpositus nucleus and also have the indirect
effect of reducing nucleo-olivary inhibitory feedback, as described
above (Fig. 9, 3).
The ontogeny of eye-blink conditioning undoubtedly depends on the
dynamic interactions of developmental processes within the olivo-cerebellar circuitry. In particular, the integrated effects of
developmental changes in the efficacy of olivo-nuclear, nucleo-olivary, and olivo-cortical projections may account for the ontogenetic emergence of eye-blink conditioning.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received June 30, 2000; revised Aug. 18, 2000; accepted Aug. 22, 2000.
This work was supported by NS38890-01A1. We thank Dr. Mark E. Stanton for the eye-blink conditioning equipment; Dr. Jeremy Payne for
the neuronal spike separation and analysis software; and Adam Muckler
and Brian Nolan for help with data collection.
Correspondence should be addressed to John H. Freeman Jr, Department of
Psychology, University of Iowa, Seashore Hall, Iowa City, Iowa, 52242. E-mail: john-freeman{at}uiowa.edu.
 |
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