Spike threshold adaptation diversifies neuronal operating modes in the auditory brain stem

Author:

Lubejko Susan T.1,Fontaine Bertrand2,Soueidan Sara E.1,MacLeod Katrina M.134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland

2. Laboratory of Auditory Neurophysiology, University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium

3. Neuroscience and Cognitive Science Program, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland

4. Center for the Comparative and Evolutionary Biology of Hearing, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland

Abstract

Single neurons function along a spectrum of neuronal operating modes whose properties determine how the output firing activity is generated from synaptic input. The auditory brain stem contains a diversity of neurons, from pure coincidence detectors to pure integrators and those with intermediate properties. We investigated how intrinsic spike initiation mechanisms regulate neuronal operating mode in the avian cochlear nucleus. Although the neurons in one division of the avian cochlear nucleus, nucleus magnocellularis, have been studied in depth, the spike threshold dynamics of the tonically firing neurons of a second division of cochlear nucleus, nucleus angularis (NA), remained unexplained. The input-output functions of tonically firing NA neurons were interrogated with directly injected in vivo-like current stimuli during whole cell patch-clamp recordings in vitro. Increasing the amplitude of the noise fluctuations in the current stimulus enhanced the firing rates in one subset of tonically firing neurons (“differentiators”) but not another (“integrators”). We found that spike thresholds showed significantly greater adaptation and variability in the differentiator neurons. A leaky integrate-and-fire neuronal model with an adaptive spike initiation process derived from sodium channel dynamics was fit to the firing responses and could recapitulate >80% of the precise temporal firing across a range of fluctuation and mean current levels. Greater threshold adaptation explained the frequency-current curve changes due to a hyperpolarized shift in the effective adaptation voltage range and longer-lasting threshold adaptation in differentiators. The fine-tuning of the intrinsic properties of different NA neurons suggests they may have specialized roles in spectrotemporal processing. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Avian cochlear nucleus angularis (NA) neurons are responsible for encoding sound intensity for sound localization and spectrotemporal processing. An adaptive spike threshold mechanism fine-tunes a subset of repetitive-spiking neurons in NA to confer coincidence detector-like properties. A model based on sodium channel inactivation properties reproduced the activity via a hyperpolarized shift in adaptation conferring fluctuation sensitivity.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

Howard Hughes Medical Institute Undergraduate fellowship

European Community Marie Sklodowski-Curie Fellowship

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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