During brain maturation, the occurrence of the extracellular matrix (ECM) terminates juvenile plasticity by mediating structural stability. Interestingly, enzymatic removal of the ECM restores juvenile forms of plasticity, as for instance demonstrated by topographical reconnectivity in sensory pathways. However, to which degree the mature ECM is a compromise between stability and flexibility in the adult brain impacting synaptic plasticity as a fundamental basis for learning, lifelong memory formation, and higher cognitive functions is largely unknown. In this study, we removed the ECM in the auditory cortex of adult Mongolian gerbils during specific phases of cortex-dependent auditory relearning, which was induced by the contingency reversal of a frequency-modulated tone discrimination, a task requiring high behavioral flexibility. We found that ECM removal promoted a significant increase in relearning performance, without erasing already establishedthat is, learned-capacities when continuing discrimination training. The cognitive flexibility required for reversal learning of previously acquired behavioral habits, commonly understood to mainly rely on frontostriatal circuits, was enhanced by promoting synaptic plasticity via ECM removal within the sensory cortex. Our findings further suggest experimental modulation of the cortical ECM as a tool to open short-term windows of enhanced activitydependent reorganization allowing for guided neuroplasticity.chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan | hyaluronidase | perineuronal net | intracortical microinjection | strategy change S tructural remodeling and stabilization of synaptic networks are key mechanisms underlying learning in the adult brain. During early life, high structural and functional plasticity is required for the experience-shaped development of basic neuronal circuits (1). With brain maturation, juvenile plasticity of so-called critical or sensitive periods is decreased and is accompanied by the appearance of the brain's extracellular matrix (ECM) and its specialized compact form named "perineuronal net" (PNN) enwrappping cell bodies and synaptic contacts (2, 3). Enzymatic degradation of the ECM in adult animals has been demonstrated to restore such forms of developmental (juvenile) plasticity with respect to topographical map plasticity in the visual cortex (4), fearresponse-mediating circuits in the amygdala (5), spinal cord injuries (6, 7), and song learning circuits of zebra finches (8). In addition, enzymatic ECM removal altered several forms of synaptic plasticity in vitro and in vivo (9-12). However, even though structural stability of networks acquired during developmental phases is essential for neuronal efficiency, mechanisms allowing synaptic remodeling are key events during learning and memory formation throughout life (13). We recently demonstrated that endogenous proteases moderately digesting specific components of the ECM are regulated in an activity-dependent manner (2, 14) and ECM removal modulates synaptic short-term plasticity by synaptic e...
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