Abstract

The inhibitory transmitters glycine and GABA undergo a developmental shift from depolarizing to hyperpolarizing action (D/H-shift). To analyse this shift in functionally related nuclei of the rat superior olivary complex (SOC), we employed voltage-sensitive dye recordings in auditory brainstem slices. Complementarily, we analysed single neurons in gramicidin perforated-patch recordings. Our results show a differential timing of the D/H-shift in the four SOC nuclei analysed. In the medial superior olive (MSO), the shift occurred at postnatal day (P) 5-9. In the superior paraolivary nucleus (SPN), it occurred between embryonic day (E) 18 and P1. No D/H-shift was observed in the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB) until P10. This is in line with the finding that most of the patched MNTB neurons displayed glycine-induced depolarizations between P0-9. While no regional differences regarding the D/H-shift were found within the MSO, SPN, and MNTB, we observed such differences in the lateral superior olive (LSO). All LSO regions showed a D/H-shift at P4-5. However, in the high-frequency regions, hyperpolarizations were large already at P6, yet amplitudes of this size were not present until P8 in the low-frequency regions, suggesting a delayed development in the latter regions. Our physiological results demonstrate that D/H-shifts in SOC nuclei are staggered in time and occur over a period of almost two weeks. Membrane-associated immunoreactivity of the Cl- outward transporter KCC2 was found in every SOC nucleus already at times when glycine was still depolarizing. This implies that the mere presence of KCC2 does not correlate with functional Cl- outward transport.

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