A novel effect of cochlear efferents:: In vivo response enhancement does not require α9 cholinergic receptors

被引:37
作者
Maison, Stephane F.
Vetter, Douglas E.
Liberman, M. Charles
机构
[1] Massachusetts Eye & Ear Infirm, Eaton Peabody Lab, Boston, MA 02114 USA
[2] Harvard Univ, Sch Med, Dept Otol & Laryngol, Boston, MA USA
[3] Tufts Univ, Sch Med, Dept Neurosci, Boston, MA USA
[4] MIT, Div Hlth Sci & Technol, Cambridge, MA USA
[5] Harvard Univ, Div Hlth Sci & Technol, Cambridge, MA USA
关键词
D O I
10.1152/jn.00067.2007
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Outer hair cells in the mammalian cochlea receive a cholinergic efferent innervation that constitutes the effector arm of a sound-evoked negative feedback loop. The well-studied suppressive effects of acetylcholine (ACh) release from efferent terminals are mediated by alpha 9/alpha 10 ACh receptors and are potently blocked by strychnine. Here, we report a novel, efferent-mediated enhancement of cochlear sound-evoked neural responses and otoacoustic emissions in mice. In controls, a slow enhancement of response amplitude to supranormal levels appears after recovery from the classic suppressive effects seen during a 70-s epoch of efferent shocks. The magnitude of post-shock enhancement can be as great as 10 dB and tends to be greater for high-frequency acoustic stimuli. Systemic strychnine at 10 mg/kg eliminates efferent-induced suppression, revealing a purely enhancing effect of efferent shocks, which peaks within 5 s after efferent-stimulation onset, maintains a constant level through the stimulation epoch, and slowly decays back to baseline with a time constant of similar to 100 s. In mice with targeted deletion of the alpha 9 ACh receptor subunit, efferent-evoked effects resemble those in wild types with strychnine blockade, further showing that this novel efferent effect is fundamentally different from all cholinergic effects previously reported.
引用
收藏
页码:3269 / 3278
页数:10
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