Hearing loss in juvenile rats leads to excessive play fighting and hyperactivity, mild cognitive deficits and altered neuronal activity in the prefrontal cortex

Jonas Jelinek , Marie Johne , Mesbah Alam , Joachim K. Krauss , Andrej Kral , Kerstin Schwabe
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Abstract

Background

In children, hearing loss has been associated with hyperactivity, disturbed social interaction, and risk of cognitive disturbances. Mechanistic explanations of these relations sometimes involve language. To investigate the effect of hearing loss on behavioral deficits in the absence of language, we tested the impact of hearing loss in juvenile rats on motor, social, and cognitive behavior and on physiology of prefrontal cortex.

Methods

Hearing loss was induced in juvenile (postnatal day 14) male Sprague-Dawley rats by intracochlear injection of neomycin under general anesthesia. Sham-operated and non-operated hearing rats served as controls. One week after surgery auditory brainstem response (ABR) measurements verified hearing loss or intact hearing in sham-operated and non-operated controls. All rats were then tested for locomotor activity (open field), coordination (Rotarod), and for social interaction during development in weeks 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, and 24 after surgery. From week 8 on, rats were trained and tested for spatial learning and memory (4-arm baited 8-arm radial maze test). In a final setting, neuronal activity was recorded in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC).

Results

In the open field deafened rats moved faster and covered more distance than sham-operated and non-operated controls from week 8 on (both p < 0.05). Deafened rats showed significantly more play fighting during development (p < 0.05), whereas other aspects of social interaction, such as following, were not affected. Learning of the radial maze test was not impaired in deafened rats (p > 0.05), but rats used less next-arm entries than other groups indicating impaired concept learning (p < 0.05). In the mPFC neuronal firing rate was reduced and enhanced irregular firing was observed. Moreover, oscillatory activity was altered, both within the mPFC and in coherence of mPFC with the somatosensory cortex (p < 0.05).

Conclusions

Hearing loss in juvenile rats leads to hyperactive behavior and pronounced play-fighting during development, suggesting a causal relationship between hearing loss and cognitive development. Altered neuronal activities in the mPFC after hearing loss support such effects on neuronal networks outside the central auditory system. This animal model provides evidence of developmental consequences of juvenile hearing loss on prefrontal cortex in absence of language as potential confounding factor.

Abstract Image

幼鼠听力损失会导致过度打斗和多动、轻度认知障碍以及前额叶皮层神经元活动的改变
背景儿童听力损失与多动、社会交往障碍和认知障碍风险有关。对这些关系的机制解释有时涉及语言。为了研究听力损失在没有语言的情况下对行为缺陷的影响,我们测试了幼年大鼠听力损失对运动、社交和认知行为以及前额叶皮层生理的影响。假手术大鼠和非手术听力大鼠作为对照组。手术一周后,听性脑干反应(ABR)测量结果证实了假手术和非手术对照组的听力损失或听力完好。然后,在术后第 1、2、4、8、16 和 24 周,对所有大鼠进行运动活动(开阔地)、协调(旋转)和发育过程中的社交互动测试。从第 8 周开始,对大鼠进行空间学习和记忆的训练和测试(4 臂诱饵 8 臂径向迷宫测试)。结果 从第8周开始,失聪大鼠在空旷场地的移动速度和覆盖距离均超过假手术和非手术对照组(均为p <0.05)。聋鼠在发育过程中明显表现出更多的打斗行为(p <0.05),而社会互动的其他方面,如跟随,则不受影响。聋鼠对径向迷宫测试的学习并没有受到影响(p >0.05),但与其他组别相比,聋鼠使用下一手臂进入迷宫的次数较少,这表明聋鼠的概念学习能力受到了影响(p <0.05)。在 mPFC 中,神经元发射率降低,不规则发射增强。结论幼鼠听力损失会导致其在发育过程中出现多动行为和明显的打斗行为,这表明听力损失与认知发展之间存在因果关系。听力损失后mPFC神经元活动的改变支持了这种对中枢听觉系统以外的神经元网络的影响。这一动物模型提供了证据,证明在没有语言这一潜在混杂因素的情况下,幼年听力损失对前额叶皮层的发育产生了影响。
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