M<sub>1 </sub>muscarinic receptor for the development of auditory cortical function

<p>Abstract</p> <p>The sensory cortex is subject to continuous remodelling during early development and throughout adulthood. This process is important for establishing normal brain function and is dependent on cholinergic modulation via muscarinic receptors. Five muscarinic recept...

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Main Authors: Shideler Karalee K, Yan Jun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2010-10-01
Series:Molecular Brain
Online Access:http://www.molecularbrain.com/content/3/1/29
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spelling doaj-a98fbbb61fff46fea806033f0f455cfc2020-11-25T01:49:16ZengBMCMolecular Brain1756-66062010-10-01312910.1186/1756-6606-3-29M<sub>1 </sub>muscarinic receptor for the development of auditory cortical functionShideler Karalee KYan Jun<p>Abstract</p> <p>The sensory cortex is subject to continuous remodelling during early development and throughout adulthood. This process is important for establishing normal brain function and is dependent on cholinergic modulation via muscarinic receptors. Five muscarinic receptor genes encode five unique receptor subtypes (M<sub>1-5</sub>). The distributions and functions of each subtype vary in central and peripheral systems. In the brain, the M<sub>1 </sub>receptor is most abundant in the cerebral cortex, where its immunoreactivity peaks transiently during early development. This likely signifies the importance of M<sub>1 </sub>receptor in the development and maintenance of normal cortical function. Several lines of study have outlined the roles of M<sub>1 </sub>receptors in the development and plasticity of the auditory cortex. For example, M<sub>1</sub>-knockout reduces experience-dependent plasticity and disrupts tonotopic mapping in the adult mouse auditory cortex. Further evidence demonstrates a role for M<sub>1 </sub>in neurite outgrowth and hence determining the structure of cortical neurons. The disruption of tonotopic maps in M<sub>1</sub>-knockout mice may be linked to alterations in thalamocortical connectivity, because the targets of thalamocortical afferents (layer IV cortical neurons) appear less mature in M<sub>1 </sub>knockouts. Herein we review the literature to date concerning M<sub>1 </sub>receptors in the auditory cortex and consider some future directions that will contribute to our understanding.</p> http://www.molecularbrain.com/content/3/1/29
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shideler Karalee K
Yan Jun
spellingShingle Shideler Karalee K
Yan Jun
M<sub>1 </sub>muscarinic receptor for the development of auditory cortical function
Molecular Brain
author_facet Shideler Karalee K
Yan Jun
author_sort Shideler Karalee K
title M<sub>1 </sub>muscarinic receptor for the development of auditory cortical function
title_short M<sub>1 </sub>muscarinic receptor for the development of auditory cortical function
title_full M<sub>1 </sub>muscarinic receptor for the development of auditory cortical function
title_fullStr M<sub>1 </sub>muscarinic receptor for the development of auditory cortical function
title_full_unstemmed M<sub>1 </sub>muscarinic receptor for the development of auditory cortical function
title_sort m<sub>1 </sub>muscarinic receptor for the development of auditory cortical function
publisher BMC
series Molecular Brain
issn 1756-6606
publishDate 2010-10-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>The sensory cortex is subject to continuous remodelling during early development and throughout adulthood. This process is important for establishing normal brain function and is dependent on cholinergic modulation via muscarinic receptors. Five muscarinic receptor genes encode five unique receptor subtypes (M<sub>1-5</sub>). The distributions and functions of each subtype vary in central and peripheral systems. In the brain, the M<sub>1 </sub>receptor is most abundant in the cerebral cortex, where its immunoreactivity peaks transiently during early development. This likely signifies the importance of M<sub>1 </sub>receptor in the development and maintenance of normal cortical function. Several lines of study have outlined the roles of M<sub>1 </sub>receptors in the development and plasticity of the auditory cortex. For example, M<sub>1</sub>-knockout reduces experience-dependent plasticity and disrupts tonotopic mapping in the adult mouse auditory cortex. Further evidence demonstrates a role for M<sub>1 </sub>in neurite outgrowth and hence determining the structure of cortical neurons. The disruption of tonotopic maps in M<sub>1</sub>-knockout mice may be linked to alterations in thalamocortical connectivity, because the targets of thalamocortical afferents (layer IV cortical neurons) appear less mature in M<sub>1 </sub>knockouts. Herein we review the literature to date concerning M<sub>1 </sub>receptors in the auditory cortex and consider some future directions that will contribute to our understanding.</p>
url http://www.molecularbrain.com/content/3/1/29
work_keys_str_mv AT shidelerkaraleek msub1submuscarinicreceptorforthedevelopmentofauditorycorticalfunction
AT yanjun msub1submuscarinicreceptorforthedevelopmentofauditorycorticalfunction
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