Publication | Open Access
Deficits in Experience-Dependent Cortical Plasticity and Sensory-Discrimination Learning in Presymptomatic Huntington's Disease Mice
113
Citations
50
References
2005
Year
NeuropsychologyBrain FunctionEarly Cognitive DeficitsStructural PlasticitySocial SciencesNeural PlasticityDisease MiceNeurologyCognitive NeuroscienceNeurogeneticsCognitive ScienceBehavioral NeuroscienceCortical RemodelingBarrel-cortex PlasticityNeurodegenerationSynaptic PlasticityNeurodegenerative DiseasesBarrel CortexNeurobiological MechanismNeuroscienceMedicineExperience-dependent Cortical PlasticitySensory-discrimination Learning
Huntington's disease (HD) is one of a group of neurodegenerative diseases caused by an expanded trinucleotide (CAG) repeat coding for an extended polyglutamine tract. The disease is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner, with onset of motor, cognitive, and psychiatric symptoms typically occurring in midlife, followed by unremitting progression and eventual death. We report here that motor presymptomatic R6/1 HD mice show a severe impairment of somatosensory-discrimination learning ability in a behavioral task that depends heavily on the barrel cortex. In parallel, there are deficits in barrel-cortex plasticity after a somatosensory whisker-deprivation paradigm. The present study demonstrates deficits in neocortical plasticity correlated with a specific learning impairment involving the same neocortical area, a finding that provides new insight into the cellular basis of early cognitive deficits in HD.
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