scholarly journals Essential Role of Somatic Kv2 Channels in High-Frequency Firing in Cartwheel Cells of the Dorsal Cochlear Nucleus

eNeuro ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. ENEURO.0515-20.2021
Author(s):  
Tomohiko Irie
2009 ◽  
Vol 102 (2) ◽  
pp. 1287-1295 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaime G. Mancilla ◽  
Paul B. Manis

Individual neurons have been shown to exhibit target cell-specific synaptic function in several brain areas. The time course of the postsynaptic conductances (PSCs) strongly influences the dynamics of local neural networks. Cartwheel cells (CWCs) are the most numerous inhibitory interneurons in the dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN). They are excited by parallel fiber synapses, which carry polysensory information, and in turn inhibit other CWCs and the main projection neurons of the DCN, pyramidal cells (PCs). CWCs have been implicated in “context-dependent” inhibition, producing either depolarizing (other CWCs) or hyperpolarizing (PCs) post synaptic potentials. In the present study, we used paired whole cell recordings to examine target-dependent inhibition from CWCs in neonatal rat DCN slices. We found that CWC inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) onto PCs are large (1.3 mV) and brief (half-width = 11.8 ms), whereas CWC IPSPs onto other CWCs are small (0.2 mV) and slow (half-width = 36.8 ms). Evoked IPSPs between CWCs exhibit paired-pulse facilitation, while CWC IPSPs onto PCs exhibit paired-pulse depression. Perforated-patch recordings showed that spontaneous IPSPs in CWCs are hyperpolarizing at rest with a mean estimated reversal potential of −67 mV. Spontaneous IPSCs were smaller and lasted longer in CWCs than in PCs, suggesting that the kinetics of the receptors are different in the two cell types. These results reveal that CWCs play a dual role in the DCN. The CWC-CWC network interactions are slow and sensitive to the average rate of CWC firing, whereas the CWC-PC network is fast and sensitive to transient changes in CWC firing.


2010 ◽  
Vol 104 (5) ◽  
pp. 2462-2473 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael T. Roberts ◽  
Laurence O. Trussell

In the outer layers of the dorsal cochlear nucleus, a cerebellum-like structure in the auditory brain stem, multimodal sensory inputs drive parallel fibers to excite both principal (fusiform) cells and inhibitory cartwheel cells. Cartwheel cells, in turn, inhibit fusiform cells and other cartwheel cells. At the microcircuit level, it is unknown how these circuit components interact to modulate the activity of fusiform cells and thereby shape the processing of auditory information. Using a variety of approaches in mouse brain stem slices, we investigated the synaptic connectivity and synaptic strength among parallel fibers, cartwheel cells, and fusiform cells. In paired recordings of spontaneous and evoked activity, we found little overlap in parallel fiber input to neighboring neurons, and activation of multiple parallel fibers was required to evoke or alter action potential firing in cartwheel and fusiform cells. Thus neighboring neurons likely respond best to distinct subsets of sensory inputs. In contrast, there was significant overlap in inhibitory input to neighboring neurons. In recordings from synaptically coupled pairs, cartwheel cells had a high probability of synapsing onto nearby fusiform cells or other nearby cartwheel cells. Moreover, single cartwheel cells strongly inhibited spontaneous firing in single fusiform cells. These synaptic relationships suggest that the set of parallel fibers activated by a particular sensory stimulus determines whether cartwheel cells provide feedforward or lateral inhibition to their postsynaptic targets.


1981 ◽  
Vol 89 (5) ◽  
pp. 763-766
Author(s):  
Robert H. Ossoff ◽  
James A. Jones ◽  
David E. Bytell

A 55-year-old woman had a right-sided neck mass overlying the angle of the mandible, which proved to be a chemodectoma. The occurrence, differential diagnosis, and relatively high frequency of incorrect preoperative diagnosis of carotid body tumors is reviewed. The essential role of angiography to substantiate the diagnosis is discussed.


1993 ◽  
Vol 69 (5) ◽  
pp. 1384-1397 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Zhang ◽  
D. Oertel

1. Intracellular recordings were made from identified cartwheel and stellate cells in the molecular and fusiform cell layers of the murine dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN). The aim of the study was to identify and characterize their synaptic inputs and to learn how synaptic inputs and intrinsic electrical properties interact to generate firing patterns. 2. Eight cells labeled by the intracellular injection of biocytin were cartwheel cells. Their axon terminals extended from the deep part of the molecular layer through the fusiform cell layer. Their dendrites extended through the molecular layer and had spines. Both the dendritic and axonal arbors were small, having diameters of approximately 150 microns in the parasagittal plane. 3. When depolarized, cartwheel cells often fired bursts of rapid action potentials superimposed on a slow depolarization. The peaks of action potentials were usually overshooting. Individually occurring action potentials were followed by two afterhyperpolarizations, as in other cells of the DCN. During bursts, action potentials did not have two distinct repolarizing phases. 4. Excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) were recorded from cartwheel cells spontaneously and after shocks to the nerve root or to the ventral cochlear nucleus (VCN). The EPSPs rose slowly. When they were suprathreshold they evoked action potentials singly or in bursts. EPSPs evoked by shocks to the nerve root or to the VCN had long latencies, the rise of EPSPs beginning between 5 and 10 ms after the shock. No inhibitory synaptic potentials, either spontaneous or driven with electrical stimulation, were detected in cells whose resting potentials were between -50 and -70 mV. 5. The locations from which excitatory input can be driven electrically are consistent with cartwheel cells receiving excitatory synaptic input from granule cells. 6. One labeled cell was a superficial stellate cell. It had smooth, straight dendrites that radiated parallel to the layers of the DCN; its axonal arbor was also planar and was restricted to the molecular layer. Both the dendritic and axonal arbors of this stellate cell were large, > 500 microns diam in the parasagittal plane. 7. The superficial stellate cell fired trains of action potentials at regular intervals that, like other cells of the DCN, were overshooting and were followed by double undershoots. 8. Shocks to the nerve root and to the surface of the VCN evoked EPSPs after 3.5 and 2 ms, respectively, in the superficial stellate cell. Chemical stimulation of the VCN also evoked excitation. No inhibitory synaptic input, spontaneous or driven, was detected.


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