Abstract

LI, L., L. M. KORNGUT, B. J. FROST AND R. J. BENINGER. Prepulse inhibition following lesions of the inferior colliculus: Prepulse intensity functions. PHYSIOL BEHAV 65(1) 133–139, 1998.—The magnitude of the acoustic startle response can be reduced by a relatively weak sound presented immediately before the startle-eliciting sound; this phenomenon has been termed prepulse inhibition (PPI). Previous studies reported that PPI was present in the decerebrate rat, indicating that the primary neural pathways mediating PPI are located in the brainstem. The present study investigated the effects of focal excitotoxic lesions of the inferior colliculus (IC) on acoustic PPI in rats. In the first part, startle magnitudes were measured in six normal rats as the interstimulus interval (ISI) between the prepulse and startle-eliciting sounds varied between 10 and 100 ms. Prepulse-inhibited startle changed in an ISI-dependent manner with the most effective ISI at 50 ms. In the second part, 21 rats were assigned to three groups: normal unoperated, cortical lesion, and IC lesion. With the ISI fixed at 50 ms, as the prepulse sound level increased from 29 to 49 dB SPL, startle responses decreased quickly in both normal and cortical lesion rats. However, rats with unilateral IC lesions made with ibotenic acid had significantly lower PPI but did not display any increase in startle magnitude. These data suggest that the IC is an important structure in the neural circuit mediating acoustic PPI.

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