Abstract

The presence of ‘giant’ synapses in the auditory brainstem is thought to be a specialization designed to encode temporal information to support perception of pitch, frequency, and sound-source localisation. These ‘giant’ synapses have been found in the ventral cochlear nucleus, the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body and the ventral nucleus of the lateral lemniscus. An interpretation of these synapses as simple relays has, however, been challenged by the observation in the gerbil that the action potential frequently fails in the ventral cochlear nucleus. Given the prominence of these synapses it is important to establish whether this phenomenon is unique to the gerbil or can be observed in other species. Here we examine the responses of units, thought to be the output of neurons in receipt of ‘giant’ synaptic endings, in the ventral cochlear nucleus and the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body in the guinea pig. We found that failure of the action-potential component, recorded from cells in the ventral cochlear nucleus, occurred in ~60% of spike waveforms when recording spontaneous activity. In the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body, we did not find evidence for action-potential failure. In the ventral cochlear nucleus action-potential failures transform the receptive field between input and output of bushy cells. Additionally, the action-potential failures result in “non-primary-like” temporal-adaptation patterns. This is important for computational models of the auditory system, which commonly assume the responses of ventral cochlear nucleus bushy cells are very similar to their “primary like” auditory-nerve-fibre inputs.

Highlights

  • The auditory system is anatomically and physiologically specialized for rapid and precise temporal coding [1,2,3]

  • Using a quantitative procedure to determine spike-waveform shape we demonstrate that guinea-pig ventral cochlear nucleus (VCN) units with a pre-synaptic potential (PP) in their extra-cellular spike waveform are characterised by a high probability of action potential (AP) failure

  • We examined the spike waveform shape of units with a PP, and some without a PP

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Summary

Introduction

The auditory system is anatomically and physiologically specialized for rapid and precise temporal coding [1,2,3]. Temporal information is thought to be critical for neural representations of sound-source location, the pitch of musical sounds, and spectral features of complex sounds, such as speech [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]. Synchronization of auditory-nerve-fibre (ANF) action potentials to the oscillations of the band-limited cochlear output is the neural basis for peripheral encoding of temporal acoustic features [12,13,14]. The temporal information in ANF firing patterns is exploited by specialized auditory brainstem circuits.

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