Tuning of synapse number, structure and function in the cochlea

2009 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Tuning of synapse number, structure and function in the cochlea​
Meyer, A. C.; Frank, T. ; Khimich, D. ; Hoch, G. ; Riedel, D. ; Chapochnikov, N. M. & Yarin, Y. M. et al.​ (2009) 
Nature Neuroscience12(4) pp. 444​-453​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nn.2293 

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Authors
Meyer, Alexander C.; Frank, Thomas ; Khimich, Darina ; Hoch, Gerhard ; Riedel, Dietmar ; Chapochnikov, Nikolai M.; Yarin, Yury M.; Harke, Benjamin; Hell, Stefan ; Egner, Alexander ; Moser, Tobias 
Abstract
Cochlear inner hair cells (IHCs) transmit acoustic information to spiral ganglion neurons through ribbon synapses. Here we have used morphological and physiological techniques to ask whether synaptic mechanisms differ along the tonotopic axis and within IHCs in the mouse cochlea. We show that the number of ribbon synapses per IHC peaks where the cochlea is most sensitive to sound. Exocytosis, measured as membrane capacitance changes, scaled with synapse number when comparing apical and midcochlear IHCs. Synapses were distributed in the subnuclear portion of IHCs. High-resolution imaging of IHC synapses provided insights into presynaptic Ca2+ channel clusters and Ca2+ signals, synaptic ribbons and postsynaptic glutamate receptor clusters and revealed subtle differences in their average properties along the tonotopic axis. However, we observed substantial variability for presynaptic Ca2+ signals, even within individual IHCs, providing a candidate presynaptic mechanism for the divergent dynamics of spiral ganglion neuron spiking.
Issue Date
2009
Journal
Nature Neuroscience 
ISSN
1097-6256
Language
English

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