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Sparsely Distributed, Pre-synaptic Kv3 K+ Channels Control Spontaneous Firing and Cross-Unit Synchrony via the Regulation of Synaptic Noise in an Auditory Brainstem Circuit

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-10-04, 14:16 authored by Timothy OIsen, Alberto Capurro, Masa Svent, Nadia Pilati, Charles Large, Nick Hartell, Martine Hamann
Spontaneous subthreshold activity in the central nervous system is fundamental to information processing and transmission, as it amplifies and optimizes sub-threshold signals, thereby improving action potential initiation and maintaining reliable firing. This form of spontaneous activity, which is frequently considered noise, is particularly important at auditory synapses where acoustic information is encoded by rapid and temporally precise firing rates. In contrast, when present in excess, this form of noise becomes detrimental to acoustic information as it contributes to the generation and maintenance of auditory disorders such as tinnitus. The most prominent contribution to subthreshold noise is spontaneous synaptic transmission (synaptic noise). Although numerous studies have examined the role of synaptic noise on single cell excitability, little is known about its pre-synaptic modulation owing in part to the difficulties of combining noise modulation with monitoring synaptic release. Here we study synaptic noise in the auditory brainstem dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) of mice and show that pharmacological potentiation of Kv3 K+ currents reduces the level of synaptic bombardment onto DCN principal fusiform cells. Using a transgenic mouse line (SyG37) expressing SyGCaMP2-mCherry, a calcium sensor that targets pre-synaptic terminals, we show that positive Kv3 K+ current modulation decreases calcium influx in a fifth of pre-synaptic boutons. Furthermore, while maintaining rapid and precise spike timing, positive Kv3 K+ current modulation increases the synchronization of local circuit neurons by reducing spontaneous activity. In conclusion, our study identifies a unique pre-synaptic mechanism which reduces synaptic noise at auditory synapses and contributes to the coherent activation of neurons in a local auditory brainstem circuit. This form of modulation highlights a new therapeutic target, namely the pre-synaptic bouton, for ameliorating the effects of hearing disorders which are dependent on aberrant spontaneous activity within the central auditory system.

Funding

This work was funded by a CASE studentship to TO (supported by the Medical Research Council and Autifony Therapeutics, grant MR/J006556). This work was also supported by Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) grants BB/K008382/1, BB/M012034/1, and BB/L00691X/1 to NH.

History

Citation

Front. Cell. Neurosci., 03 September 2021 | https://doi.org/10.3389/fncel.2021.721371

Author affiliation

Department of Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour, College of Life Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience

Volume

15

Publisher

Frontiers Media

eissn

1662-5102

Acceptance date

2021-08-02

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2021-10-04

Language

English