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KMID : 1161520190230040260
Animal Cells and Systems
2019 Volume.23 No. 4 p.260 ~ p.269
Long-term exposure to moderate noise induces neural plasticity in the infant rat primary auditory cortex
Xia Chenchen

Yin Manli
Pan Ping
Fang Fanghao
Zhou You
Ji Yonghua
Abstract
Previous studies have reported that rearing infant rat pups in continuous moderate-level noise delayed the formation of topographic representational order and the refinement of response selectivity in the primary auditory (A1) cortex. The present study further verified that exposure to long-term moderate-intensity white noise (70?dB sound pressure level) from postnatal day (P) 12 to P30 elevated the hearing thresholds of infant rats. Compared with age-matched control rats, noise exposure (NE) rats had elevated hearing thresholds ranging from low to high frequencies, accompanied by decreased amplitudes and increased latencies of the two initial auditory brainstem response waves. The power of raw local field potential oscillations and high-frequency ¥â oscillation in the A1 cortex of NE rats were larger, whereas the power of high-frequency ¥ã oscillation was smaller than that of control rats. In addition, the expression levels of five glutamate receptor (GluR) subunits in the A1 cortex of NE rats were decreased with laminar specificity. These results suggest that the altered neural excitability and decreased GluR expression may underlie the delay of functional maturation in the A1 cortex, and may have implications for the treatment of hearing impairment induced by environmental noise.
KEYWORD
Noise exposure, hearing threshold, LFP oscillation, A1 cortex, glutamate receptor
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