THE ROLE OF NEWBORN NEURONS FOR THE SONG VARIABILITY IN THE ADULT BENGALESE FINCH
Center of Biosciences, v. v. i., Slovak Academy of Sciences, Institute of Animal Biochemistry and Genetics
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Date TBA
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Poster Board
PS01-07AM-199
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We used 32 males divided into 3 groups according to the type of substance administered intramuscularly for 4 weeks: saline (control, n=9), memantine (MEM, n=9), or temozolomide (TMZ, n=14). New cells were labeled with the proliferation markers 5-bromo-2′-deoxyuridine (BrdU) and 5-ethynyl-2′-deoxyuridine (EdU) and the birds were sacrificed at six weeks.
We found that the substances significantly affected the number of dividing cells in the neurogenic ventricular zone and the number of new neurons in vocal areas. Compared to controls, MEM increased the cell counts, while TMZ decreased them. TMZ reduced song sequence variability, leading to more stable, linear songs. It also decreased the number of syllables, transitions, and motifs. The effect of MEM on song variability was bidirectional.
These findings suggest that MEM and TMZ influence neurogenesis, and that newly generated neurons contribute to variability in song sequences.
This study is supported by APVV-20-0344, VEGA 2/0150/24 and APP0532.
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