23 research outputs found
Corticofugal Modulation of Initial Neural Processing of Sound Information from the Ipsilateral Ear in the Mouse
Background: Cortical neurons implement a high frequency-specific modulation of subcortical nuclei that includes the cochlear nucleus. Anatomical studies show that corticofugal fibers terminating in the auditory thalamus and midbrain are mostly ipsilateral. Differently, corticofugal fibers terminating in the cochlear nucleus are bilateral, which fits to the needs of binaural hearing that improves hearing quality. This leads to our hypothesis that corticofugal modulation of initial neural processing of sound information from the contralateral and ipsilateral ears could be equivalent or coordinated at the first sound processing level. Methodology/Principal Findings: With the focal electrical stimulation of the auditory cortex and single unit recording, this study examined corticofugal modulation of the ipsilateral cochlear nucleus. The same methods and procedures as described in our previous study of corticofugal modulation of contralateral cochlear nucleus were employed simply for comparison. We found that focal electrical stimulation of cortical neurons induced substantial changes in the response magnitude, response latency and receptive field of ipsilateral cochlear nucleus neurons. Cortical stimulation facilitated auditory response and shortened the response latency of physiologically matched neurons whereas it inhibited auditory response and lengthened the response latency of unmatched neurons. Finally, cortical stimulation shifted the best frequencies of cochlear neurons towards those of stimulated cortical neurons
A Threshold Equation for Action Potential Initiation
In central neurons, the threshold for spike initiation can depend on the stimulus and varies between cells and between recording sites in a given cell, but it is unclear what mechanisms underlie this variability. Properties of ionic channels are likely to play a role in threshold modulation. We examined in models the influence of Na channel activation, inactivation, slow voltage-gated channels and synaptic conductances on spike threshold. We propose a threshold equation which quantifies the contribution of all these mechanisms. It provides an instantaneous time-varying value of the threshold, which applies to neurons with fluctuating inputs. We deduce a differential equation for the threshold, similar to the equations of gating variables in the Hodgkin-Huxley formalism, which describes how the spike threshold varies with the membrane potential, depending on channel properties. We find that spike threshold depends logarithmically on Na channel density, and that Na channel inactivation and K channels can dynamically modulate it in an adaptive way: the threshold increases with membrane potential and after every action potential. Our equation was validated with simulations of a previously published multicompartemental model of spike initiation. Finally, we observed that threshold variability in models depends crucially on the shape of the Na activation function near spike initiation (about −55 mV), while its parameters are adjusted near half-activation voltage (about −30 mV), which might explain why many models exhibit little threshold variability, contrary to experimental observations. We conclude that ionic channels can account for large variations in spike threshold
Biophysical Basis for Three Distinct Dynamical Mechanisms of Action Potential Initiation
Transduction of graded synaptic input into trains of all-or-none action
potentials (spikes) is a crucial step in neural coding. Hodgkin identified three
classes of neurons with qualitatively different analog-to-digital transduction
properties. Despite widespread use of this classification scheme, a
generalizable explanation of its biophysical basis has not been described. We
recorded from spinal sensory neurons representing each class and reproduced
their transduction properties in a minimal model. With phase plane and
bifurcation analysis, each class of excitability was shown to derive from
distinct spike initiating dynamics. Excitability could be converted between all
three classes by varying single parameters; moreover, several parameters, when
varied one at a time, had functionally equivalent effects on excitability. From
this, we conclude that the spike-initiating dynamics associated with each of
Hodgkin's classes represent different outcomes in a nonlinear
competition between oppositely directed, kinetically mismatched currents. Class
1 excitability occurs through a saddle node on invariant circle bifurcation when
net current at perithreshold potentials is inward (depolarizing) at steady
state. Class 2 excitability occurs through a Hopf bifurcation when, despite net
current being outward (hyperpolarizing) at steady state, spike initiation occurs
because inward current activates faster than outward current. Class 3
excitability occurs through a quasi-separatrix crossing when fast-activating
inward current overpowers slow-activating outward current during a stimulus
transient, although slow-activating outward current dominates during constant
stimulation. Experiments confirmed that different classes of spinal lamina I
neurons express the subthreshold currents predicted by our simulations and,
further, that those currents are necessary for the excitability in each cell
class. Thus, our results demonstrate that all three classes of excitability
arise from a continuum in the direction and magnitude of subthreshold currents.
Through detailed analysis of the spike-initiating process, we have explained a
fundamental link between biophysical properties and qualitative differences in
how neurons encode sensory input
Multidimensional Characterization and Differentiation of Neurons in the Anteroventral Cochlear Nucleus
Multiple parallel auditory pathways ascend from the cochlear nucleus. It is generally accepted that the origin of these pathways are distinct groups of neurons differing in their anatomical and physiological properties. In extracellular in vivo recordings these neurons are typically classified on the basis of their peri-stimulus time histogram. In the present study we reconsider the question of classification of neurons in the anteroventral cochlear nucleus (AVCN) by taking a wider range of response properties into account. The study aims at a better understanding of the AVCN's functional organization and its significance as the source of different ascending auditory pathways. The analyses were based on 223 neurons recorded in the AVCN of the Mongolian gerbil. The range of analysed parameters encompassed spontaneous activity, frequency coding, sound level coding, as well as temporal coding. In order to categorize the unit sample without any presumptions as to the relevance of certain response parameters, hierarchical cluster analysis and additional principal component analysis were employed which both allow a classification on the basis of a multitude of parameters simultaneously. Even with the presently considered wider range of parameters, high number of neurons and more advanced analytical methods, no clear boundaries emerged which would separate the neurons based on their physiology. At the current resolution of the analysis, we therefore conclude that the AVCN units more likely constitute a multi-dimensional continuum with different physiological characteristics manifested at different poles. However, more complex stimuli could be useful to uncover physiological differences in future studies
Short Term Depression Unmasks the Ghost Frequency
Short Term Plasticity (STP) has been shown to exist extensively in synapses throughout the brain. Its function is more or less clear in the sense that it alters the probability of synaptic transmission at short time scales. However, it is still unclear what effect STP has on the dynamics of neural networks. We show, using a novel dynamic STP model, that Short Term Depression (STD) can affect the phase of frequency coded input such that small networks can perform temporal signal summation and determination with high accuracy. We show that this property of STD can readily solve the problem of the ghost frequency, the perceived pitch of a harmonic complex in absence of the base frequency. Additionally, we demonstrate that this property can explain dynamics in larger networks. By means of two models, one of chopper neurons in the Ventral Cochlear Nucleus and one of a cortical microcircuit with inhibitory Martinotti neurons, it is shown that the dynamics in these microcircuits can reliably be reproduced using STP. Our model of STP gives important insights into the potential roles of STP in self-regulation of cortical activity and long-range afferent input in neuronal microcircuits