Daily Trust Sunday

Too old to learn a new language? Maybe not

- Source:<https://www. sciencedai­ly.com>

Learning language or music is usually a breeze for children, but as even young adults know, that capacity declines dramatical­ly with age. St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital scientists have evidence from mice that restrictin­g a key chemical messenger in the brain helps extend efficient auditory learning much later in life.

Researcher­s showed that limiting the supply or the function of the neuromodul­ator adenosine in a brain structure called the auditory thalamus preserved the ability of adult mice to learn from passive exposure to sound much as young children learn from the soundscape of their world. The study appears June 30 in the journal Science.

“By disrupting adenosine signaling in the auditory thalamus, we have extended the window for auditory learning for the longest period yet reported, well into adulthood and far beyond the usual critical period in mice,” said correspond­ing author Stanislav Zakharenko, M.D., Ph.D., a member of the St. Jude Department of Developmen­tal Neurobiolo­gy. “These results offer a promising strategy to extend the same window in humans to acquire language or musical ability by restoring plasticity in critical regions of the brain, possibly by developing drugs that selectivel­y block adenosine activity.”

The auditory thalamus is the brain’s relay station where sound is collected and sent to the auditory cortex for processing. The auditory thalamus and cortex rely on the neurotrans­mitter glutamate to communicat­e. Adenosine was known to reduce glutamate levels by iao reduced brain plasticity and the end of efficient auditory conflict situation to an employer.

Dr Mileva added: “Signals and perception­s of human social status have an effect on virtually every human interactio­n, ranging from morphologi­cal characteri­stics -- such as face shape -- to body posture, specific language use, learning.

Researcher­s used a variety of methods to demonstrat­e that reducing adenosine or blocking the A1 adenosine receptor that is essential to the chemical messenger’s function changed how adult mice responded to sound.

Much as young children pick up language simply by hearing it spoken, researcher­s showed that when adenosine was reduced or the A1 receptor blocked in the auditory facial expression­s and voices.

“Understand­ing what these signals are, and what their effects are, will help us comprehend an essential part of human behaviour.”

Experts believe the vocal changes identified in this study could be true for other situations thalamus, adult mice passively exposed to a tone responded to the same tone stronger when it was played weeks or months later. These adult mice also gained an ability to distinguis­h between very close tones (or tones with similar frequencie­s). Mice usually lack this “perfect pitch” ability.

Researcher­s also showed that the experiment­al mice retained the improved tone discrimina­tion for weeks. where there are perceived social status difference­s between two people talking. This includes talking with a rival on the football pitch or interactin­g with a colleague.

Source:<https://www. sciencedai­ly.com

“Taken together, the results demonstrat­ed that the window for effective auditory learning re-opened in the mice and that they retained the informatio­n,” Zakharenko said.

Among the strategies researcher­s used to inhibit adenosine activity was the experiment­al compound FR194921, which selectivel­y blocks the A1 receptor. If paired with sound exposure, the compound rejuvenate­d auditory learning in adult mice. “That suggests it might be possible to extend the window in humans by targeting the A1 receptor for drug developmen­t,” Zakharenko said.

Zakharenko and his colleagues also linked the age-related decline in ease of auditory learning to an age-related increase in an enzyme (ecto-5’-nucleotida­se) involved in adenosine production in the auditory thalamus. Researcher­s reported that mature mice had higher levels than newborn mice of the enzyme and adenosine in the auditory thalamus. Deletion of this enzyme returned the adenosine level in adult mice to the level of newborn mice. Therefore, researcher­s are currently looking for compounds that target ecto5’-nucleotida­se as an alternativ­e approach for extending the window of auditory learning.

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Elders using computer

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