Abstract
Coincidence detector neurons of the medial superior olive (MSO) are sensitive to interaural time differences in the range of a few tens of microseconds. The biophysical basis for this remarkable acuity is a short integration time constant of the membrane, which is achieved by large low voltage-activated potassium and hyperpolarization-activated inward cation conductances. Additional temporal precision is thought to be achieved through a sub-cellular distribution of low voltage-activated potassium channel expression biased to the soma. To evaluate the contribution of potassium channels, we investigated the presence and sub-cellular distribution profile of seven potassium channel sub-units in adult MSO neurons of gerbils. We find that low- and high voltage-activated potassium channels are present with distinct sub-cellular distributions. Overall, low voltage-activated potassium channels appear to be biased to the soma while high voltage-activated potassium channels are more evenly distributed and show a clear expression at distal dendrites. Additionally, low voltage-activated potassium channel sub-units co-localize with glycinergic inputs while HCN1 channels co-localize more with high voltage-activated potassium channels. Functionally, high voltage-activated potassium currents are already active at low voltages near the resting potential. We describe a possible role of high voltage-activated potassium channels in modulating EPSPs in a computational model and contributing to setting the integration time window of coincidental inputs. Our data shows that MSO neurons express a large set of different potassium channels with distinct functional relevance.
Highlights
Neurons in the medial superior olive (MSO) detect interaural time differences (ITDs) in the microsecond time range by an exquisitely precise integration mechanism (Grothe et al, 2010)
The microtubule associated protein 2 (MAP2) staining was used to delineate the somato-dendritic extent of MSO neurons and to evaluate distribution patterns
We show the diversity of spatial distribution profiles of potassium channels expressed in MSO neurons of mature gerbils
Summary
Neurons in the medial superior olive (MSO) detect interaural time differences (ITDs) in the microsecond time range by an exquisitely precise integration mechanism (Grothe et al, 2010). As action potentials in adult gerbil MSO neurons are very small, the presence and function of high voltage-activated potassium channels is unclear. Kv1.1 channels appear to be expressed with a sub-cellular gradient, decreasing toward the distal dendrites (Mathews et al, 2010) These channels generate low voltage-activated currents, whose expression profile indicates a functional relevance in reducing the coincidence detection window (Scott et al, 2005; Mathews et al, 2010) and in interacting with local inhibition to achieve microsecond precise ITD detection (Myoga et al, 2014)
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