Fast inhibition underlies the transmission of auditory information between cochlear nuclei

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Abstract

A direct commissural connection between cochlear nuclei provides a pathway by which binaural input can influence the processing of acoustic information through the ventral cochlear nucleus. Despite anatomical evidence to suggest the existence of such a pathway, its nature and behavior have not been investigated previously. This in vivo intracellular electrophysiological study provides direct evidence of monosynaptic (mean latency, 1.43 msec), inhibitory commissural input to T stellate cells. This inhibition is fast acting (duration, < 10 msec), occurring with little synaptic delay (-0.3 msec). Electrical stimulation also revealed the initiation of antidromic responses in the onset chopper population, signifying D stellate neurons as a source of commissural inputs. Activation of the commissural connection was most evident in response to broadband stimuli. These results provide the first compelling evidence of a fast, monosynaptic commissural pathway arising from contralateral D stellate neurons providing broadband inhibitory input to T stellate cells.

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APA

Needham, K., & Paolini, A. G. (2003). Fast inhibition underlies the transmission of auditory information between cochlear nuclei. Journal of Neuroscience, 23(15), 6357–6361. https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.23-15-06357.2003

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