4.7 Article

Strengthening of the Efferent Olivocochlear System Leads to Synaptic Dysfunction and Tonotopy Disruption of a Central Auditory Nucleus

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 39, Issue 36, Pages 7037-7048

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2536-18.2019

Keywords

alpha 9 alpha 10 nAChR; Chrna9L9 ' T; efferent MOC inhibition; MNTB; tonotopy

Categories

Funding

  1. Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica
  2. Fondation Pour l'Audition Scientific Grand Prize
  3. National Institutes of Health [R01 DC001508, SC1DC015907]
  4. Argentinian government [DEVTF-160703]

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The auditory system in many mammals is immature at birth but precisely organized in adults. Spontaneous activity in the inner ear plays a critical role in guiding this maturation process. This is shaped by an efferent pathway that descends from the brainstem and makes transient direct synaptic contacts with inner hair cells. In this work, we used an alpha 9 cholinergic nicotinic receptor knock-in mouse model (of either sex) with enhanced medial efferent activity (Chrna9L9'T, L9'T) to further understand the role of the olivocochlear system in the correct establishment of auditory circuits. Wave III of auditory brainstem responses (which represents synchronized activity of synapses within the superior olivary complex) was smaller in L9'T mice, suggesting a central dysfunction. The mechanism underlying this functional alteration was analyzed in brain slices containing the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB), where neurons are topographically organized along a mediolateral (ML) axis. The topographic organization of MNTB physiological properties observed in wildtype (WT) was abolished in L9'T mice. Additionally, electrophysiological recordings in slices indicated MNTB synaptic alterations. In vivo multielectrode recordings showed that the overall level of MNTB activity was reduced in the L9'T. The present results indicate that the transient cochlear efferent innervation to inner hair cells during the critical period before the onset of hearing is involved in the refinement of topographic maps as well as in setting the properties of synaptic transmission at a central auditory nucleus.

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