Neuron
Volume 80, Issue 6, 18 December 2013, Pages 1464-1476
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Article
Diminished FoxP2 Levels Affect Dopaminergic Modulation of Corticostriatal Signaling Important to Song Variability

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2013.09.021Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • FoxP2 knockdown abolishes social modulation of song variability in adult birds

  • FoxP2 knockdown abolishes context-dependent changes in corticostriatal activity

  • Foxp2 knockdown accelerates signal propagation through corticostriatal circuits

  • FoxP2 knockdown interferes with D1R-dependent modulation of corticostriatal activity

Summary

Mutations of the FOXP2 gene impair speech and language development in humans and shRNA-mediated suppression of the avian ortholog FoxP2 disrupts song learning in juvenile zebra finches. How diminished FoxP2 levels affect vocal control and alter the function of neural circuits important to learned vocalizations remains unclear. Here we show that FoxP2 knockdown in the songbird striatum disrupts developmental and social modulation of song variability. Recordings in anesthetized birds show that FoxP2 knockdown interferes with D1R-dependent modulation of activity propagation in a corticostriatal pathway important to song variability, an effect that may be partly attributable to reduced D1R and DARPP-32 protein levels. Furthermore, recordings in singing birds reveal that FoxP2 knockdown prevents social modulation of singing-related activity in this pathway. These findings show that reduced FoxP2 levels interfere with the dopaminergic modulation of vocal variability, which may impede song and speech development by disrupting reinforcement learning mechanisms.

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