scholarly journals Kv3 K+ currents contribute to spike-timing in dorsal cochlear nucleus principal cells

2018 ◽  
Vol 133 ◽  
pp. 319-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy Olsen ◽  
Alberto Capurro ◽  
Nadia Pilati ◽  
Charles H. Large ◽  
Martine Hamann
2010 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 409-420 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seth D. Koehler ◽  
Shashwati Pradhan ◽  
Paul B. Manis ◽  
Susan E. Shore

2004 ◽  
Vol 7 (7) ◽  
pp. 719-725 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thanos Tzounopoulos ◽  
Yuil Kim ◽  
Donata Oertel ◽  
Laurence O Trussell

2006 ◽  
Vol 69 (10-12) ◽  
pp. 1191-1194 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick D. Roberts ◽  
Christine V. Portfors ◽  
Nathaniel Sawtell ◽  
Richard Felix II

2007 ◽  
Vol 98 (2) ◽  
pp. 744-756 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine V. Portfors ◽  
Patrick D. Roberts

The dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) is an initial site of central auditory processing and also the first site of multisensory convergence in the auditory pathway. The auditory nerve imparts a tonotopic frequency organization on the responses of principal cells in the DCN. Cartwheel cells modify the responses of principal cells, but they do not receive direct auditory nerve input. This study shows that cartwheel cells respond well to tonal stimuli in the awake mouse and they have a well-defined characteristic frequency that corresponds to the tonotopic organization of the DCN. The auditory responses of cartwheel cells exhibit complex spectrotemporal responses to tones, with excitation and inhibition modulating the firing patterns in both frequency and time after onset of the stimulus. Temporal responses to best-frequency tones are highly variable between cartwheel cells, but a simple model is used to unify this variability as differences in the timing of synaptic currents. Cartwheel cell responses to two-tone stimuli show that interactions from different frequencies affect the output of cartwheel cells. The results suggest that at this primary auditory structure, processing of sound at one frequency can be modified by sounds of different frequency. These complex frequency and temporal interactions in cartwheel cells suggest that these neurons play an active role in basic sound processing.


2007 ◽  
Vol 97 (6) ◽  
pp. 4162-4172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah E. Street ◽  
Paul B. Manis

Many studies of the dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) have focused on the representation of acoustic stimuli in terms of average firing rate. However, recent studies have emphasized the role of spike timing in information encoding. We sought to ascertain whether DCN pyramidal cells might employ similar strategies and to what extent intrinsic excitability regulates spike timing. Gaussian distributed low-pass noise current was injected into pyramidal cells in a brain slice preparation. The shuffled autocorrelation-based analysis was used to compute a correlation index of spike times across trials. The noise causes the cells to fire with temporal precision (SD ≅ 1–2 ms) and high reproducibility. Increasing the coefficient of variation of the noise improved the reproducibility of the spike trains, whereas increasing the firing rate of the neuron decreased the neurons' ability to respond with predictable patterns of spikes. Simulated inhibitory postsynaptic potentials superimposed on the noise stimulus enhanced spike timing for >300 ms, although the enhancement was greatest during the first 100 ms. We also found that populations of pyramidal neurons respond to the same noise stimuli with correlated spike trains, suggesting that ensembles of neurons in the DCN receiving shared input can fire with similar timing. These results support the hypothesis that spike timing can be an important aspect of information coding in the DCN.


2000 ◽  
Vol 83 (2) ◽  
pp. 926-940 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin A. Davis ◽  
Eric D. Young

The dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) is rich in both glycine and GABA inhibitory neurotransmitter systems, and the response properties of its principal cells (pyramidal and giant cells) are strongly shaped by inhibitory inputs. For example, DCN principal cells often display highly nonmonotonic (so-called type IV) input-output functions in response to best-frequency (BF) tones. In this study, the inhibitory inputs onto the principal cell types and onto response types of known inhibitory interneurons were compared before and during iontophoretic application of the glycine- and GABAA-receptor antagonists, strychnine and bicuculline. Strychnine eliminates the central (on-BF) inhibitory area in type IV units, resulting in monotonic BF rate-level curves. Unexpectedly, bicuculline primarily enhances inhibition in principal-cell types; for example, type IV units are inhibited at lower sound levels in the presence of bicuculline. Principal cell types with weaker inhibitory inputs (type IV-T and type III units) are more strongly inhibited in the presence of bicuculline and usually are converted into type IV units. This enhancement of on-BF inhibition by bicuculline suggests a disinhibitory process involving GABAA action on a non-GABAAergic inhibitory pathway. This latter pathway is probably glycinergic and involves type II units (deep-layer vertical cells) and/or complex-spiking units (superficial cartwheel cells) because both of these unit types are disinhibited by bicuculline. One intrinsic GABAA source could be the superficial stellate cells in DCN because bicuculline partly blocks the inhibition evoked by somatosensory-stimulated activation of the superficial granule-cell circuitry in DCN. Taken together, the results suggest that glycinergic circuits mediate directly the inhibition of DCN principal cells, but that GABAAergic circuits modulate the strength of the inhibition.


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