posted on 2017-01-25, 16:34authored byJ. H. Weatherstone, C. Kopp-Scheinpflug, N. Pilati, Y. Wang, Ian D Forsythe, E. W. Rubel, B. L. Tempel
The medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB) is an important source of inhibition during the computation of sound location. It transmits fast and precisely timed action potentials at high frequencies; this requires an efficient calcium clearance mechanism, in which the plasma membrane calcium ATPase 2 (PMCA2) is a key component. Deafwaddler (dfw(2J)) mutant mice have a null mutation in PMCA2 causing deafness in homozygotes (dfw(2J)/dfw(2J)) and high frequency hearing loss in heterozygotes (+/dfw(2J)). Despite the deafness phenotype, no significant differences in MNTB volume or cell number were observed in dfw(2J) homozygous mutants, suggesting PMCA2 is not required for MNTB neuron survival. The MNTB tonotopic axis encodes high to low sound frequencies across the medial to lateral dimension. We discovered a cell size gradient along this axis: lateral neuronal somata are significantly larger than medially located somata. This size gradient is decreased in +/dfw(2J) and absent in dfw(2J)/dfw(2J) The lack of acoustically driven input suggests that sound-evoked activity is required for maintenance of the cell size gradient. This hypothesis was corroborated by selective elimination of auditory hair cell activity using either hair cell elimination in Pou4f3 DTR mice or inner ear tetrodotoxin (TTX) treatment. The change in soma size was reversible and recovered within 7 days of TTX treatment, suggesting that regulation of the gradient is dependent on synaptic activity, and that these changes are plastic rather than permanent.
Funding
This research was funded by an Auditory Neuroscience Training Grant
DC005361 (JAW), RO1 DC02739 (BLT), P30Core DC04661 (EWR), R01 DC03829
(EWR), DFG SFB870/2-A10 (CKS), MRC K005170 (IDF).
History
Citation
Journal of Neurophysiology, 2016, pp. jn.00528.2016-?
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/MBSP Non-Medical Departments/Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour