IN-VITRO ANALYSIS OF OPTIMAL STIMULI FOR PHASE-LOCKING AND TIME-DELAYED MODULATION OF FIRING IN AVIAN NUCLEUS LAMINARIS NEURONS

Citation
Ad. Reyes et al., IN-VITRO ANALYSIS OF OPTIMAL STIMULI FOR PHASE-LOCKING AND TIME-DELAYED MODULATION OF FIRING IN AVIAN NUCLEUS LAMINARIS NEURONS, The Journal of neuroscience, 16(3), 1996, pp. 993-1007
Citations number
45
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences,Neurosciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
02706474
Volume
16
Issue
3
Year of publication
1996
Pages
993 - 1007
Database
ISI
SICI code
0270-6474(1996)16:3<993:IAOOSF>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
Neurons of the avian nucleus laminaris (NL) provide a neural substrate for azimuthal sound localization. We examined the optimal stimuli for NL neurons to maintain high discharge rates, reliable phase-locking, and sensitivity to time-delayed stimuli. Whole-cell recordings were pe rformed in chick [embryonic days 19-21 (E19-E21)] NL neurons using an in vitro slice preparation. Variation of membrane properties along the tonotopic axis was examined, Computer-controlled intracellular curren t injection was used to mimic postsynaptic currents or conductances (P SCs) generated in NL neurons by the firing of nucleus magnocellularis (NM) neurons during acoustic stimulation. At various stimulus frequenc ies, the effects of varying the number of NM cells and PSC amplitudes on firing rate and phase-locking were examined. During high-frequency stimulation, the greatest firing rate and phase-locking occurred when the protocol contained few NM cells that generated large PSCs. Because the stimulus-evoked unitary PSCs are small, we propose that NM cells fire in synchrony to generate large PSCs. To mimic the arrival of PSCs during binaural stimulation, two stimulus trains were summed at diffe rent delays before injection. The firing rate of NL neurons was greate st with zero delay. A delay of half the stimulus period evoked firing that was less than that evoked with a single train. Neurons lacking st rong outward rectification exhibited neither reliable phase-locking du ring high-frequency stimulation nor sensitivity to stimulus delays. Th ese findings suggest that the firing responses of NL neurons are deter mined primarily by their membrane properties.