Abstract

The membranes of auditory and vestibular afferent neurons each contain diverse groups of ion channels that lead to heterogeneity in their intrinsic biophysical properties. Pioneering work in both auditory- and vestibular-ganglion physiology have individually examined this remarkable diversity, but there are few direct comparisons between the two ganglia. Here the firing patterns recorded by whole-cell patch-clamping in neonatal vestibular- and spiral ganglion neurons are compared. Indicative of an overall heterogeneity in ion channel composition, both ganglia exhibit qualitatively similar firing patterns ranging from sustained-spiking to transient-spiking in response to current injection. The range of resting potentials, voltage thresholds, current thresholds, input-resistances, and first-spike latencies are similarly broad in both ganglion groups. The covariance between several biophysical properties (e.g., resting potential to voltage threshold and their dependence on postnatal age) was similar between the two ganglia. Cell sizes were on average larger and more variable in VGN than in SGN. One sub-group of VGN stood out as having extra-large somata with transient-firing patterns, very low-input resistance, fast first-spike latencies, and required large current amplitudes to induce spiking. Despite these differences, the input resistance per unit area of the large-bodied transient neurons was like that of smaller-bodied transient-firing neurons in both VGN and SGN, thus appearing to be size-scaled versions of other transient-firing neurons. Our analysis reveals that although auditory and vestibular afferents serve very different functions in distinct sensory modalities, their biophysical properties are more closely related by firing pattern and cell size than by sensory modality.

Highlights

  • Auditory and vestibular afferents are bipolar neurons that receive, filter, and transmit information from the sensory epithelium to the brainstem

  • The somata of spiral and vestibular ganglia respond with a wide range of firing patterns to injected currents (Figures 2A–E spiral ganglion, Figures 2F–J vestibular ganglion)

  • We broadly grouped cells based on these firing patterns

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Auditory and vestibular afferents are bipolar neurons that receive, filter, and transmit information from the sensory epithelium to the brainstem. Despite the many morphological and functional differences between auditory and vestibular afferents, many of the individual components of their synapses are similar In both systems, sensory hair cells bearing synaptic ribbons (MerchanPerez and Liberman, 1996; Lysakowski and Goldberg, 2008) release glutamate to drive post-synaptic glutamate receptors (Glowatzki and Fuchs, 2002; Songer and Eatock, 2013; Sadeghi et al, 2014). Such diversity allows the neuronal subgroups to encode specific features of the incoming sensory information. I take the first steps by comparing firing patterns and neuronal excitability from patch-clamp recordings made in our laboratory from spiral- and vestibular-ganglion neurons

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