NYAS Conferences
New York Academy of Sciences
left end
Search
divider divider feedback right end
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences login

Main

Browse Volumes

Forthcoming Volumes

Annals PrePrints

Annals Extra

E-mail Alerts

Subscriptions & Orders

New Proposals

Author Guidelines

About Annals

Help

Get free Annals volume as a NYAS member: http://www.nyas.org/annalsreaderhw
Issue 871 coverOTOLITH FUNCTION IN SPATIAL ORIENTATION AND MOVEMENT Copyright © 1999 by the New York Academy of Sciences
description

This Volume
Table of Contents
Description
This Article
Full Text
Full Text (PDF)
Services
Similar articles in this journal
Similar articles in PubMed
Alert me to new issues of the journal
Download to citation manager
Citing Articles
Citing Articles via HighWire
Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Articles by LOCKE, R.
Articles by HIGHSTEIN, S.
Search for Related Content
PubMed
PubMed Citation
Articles by LOCKE, R.
Articles by HIGHSTEIN, S.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 871:35-50 (1999)
© 1999 New York Academy of Sciences

Miniature EPSPs and Sensory Encoding in the Primary Afferents of the Vestibular Lagena of the Toadfish, Opsanus tau

RACHEL LOCKEa, JEAN VAUTRINb AND STEPHEN HIGHSTEINa,c

aWashington University School of Medicine, Department of Otolaryngology, Box 8115, 4566 Scott Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, USA
bINSERM 432, Université Montpellier II, Visiting Laboratory of Neurophysiology, NINDS, NIH, Building 36, Room 2C02, 9000 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA

aTo whom correspondence may be addressed.

The synaptic activity transmitted from vestibular hair cells of the lagena to primary afferent neurons was recorded in vitro using sharp, intracellular micro-electrodes. At rest, the activity was composed of miniature excitatory postsynaptic potentials (mEPSPs) at frequencies from 5 to 20/s and action potentials (APs) at frequencies between 0 and 10/s. mEPSPs recorded from a single fiber displayed a large variability. For mEPSPs not triggering APs, amplitudes exhibited an average coefficient of variance (CV) of 0.323 and rise times an average CV of 0.516. APs were only triggered by mEPSPs with larger amplitudes (estimated 4-6 mV) and/or steeper maximum rate of rise (10.9 mV/ms, ± 3.7 SD, n = 4 experiments) compared to (3.50 mV/ms, ±0.07 SD, n = 6 experiments) for nontriggering mEPSPs. The smallest mEPSPs showed a fast rise time (0.99 ms between 10% and 90% of peak amplitude) and limited variability across fibers (CV: 0.18) confirming that they were not attenuated signals, but rather represented single-transmitter discharges (TDs). The mEPSP amplitude and rise-time relationship suggests that many mEPSPs represented several, rather than a single pulse of secretion or TDs. According to the estimated overall TD frequency, the coincidence of TDs contributing to the same mEPSP were not statistically independent, indicating a positive interaction between TDs that is reminiscent of the way subminiature signals group to form minature signals at the neuromuscular junction. Depending on the duration and intensity of efferent stimulation, a complete block of AP initiation occurred either immediately or after a delay of a few seconds. Efferent stimulation did not significantly change AP threshold level, but abruptly decreased mEPSP frequency to a near-complete block that followed the block of APs. Maximum mEPSP rate of rise decreased during, and recovered progressively after, efferent stimulation. After termination of efferent stimulation, mEPSP amplitude did not recover instantly and for a few seconds the amplitude distribution of synaptic events showed fewer large-amplitude events than during the control period. This confirms that mEPSP amplitude and rate of rise properties, which are critical for triggering afferent APs, are modified by efferent activity. The depression of afferent AP firing during efferent stimulation corresponded to a decrease in mEPSP frequency and, to a lesser extent, a decrease in mEPSP amplitude and rate of rise, suggesting, a decrease in the level of interaction among TDs contributing to a mEPSP.




This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
J. Neurophysiol.Home page
S. M. Tomchik and Z. Lu
Modulation of Auditory Signal-to-Noise Ratios by Efferent Stimulation
J Neurophysiol, June 1, 2006; 95(6): 3562 - 3570.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
J. Physiol.Home page
P. A. Fuchs
Time and intensity coding at the hair cell's ribbon synapse
J. Physiol., July 1, 2005; 566(1): 7 - 12.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]



footerLeft footerRight