Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 12, 962-969, Copyright © 1992 by Society for Neuroscience
Aberrant projection induced by otocyst removal maintains normal tonotopic organization in the chick cochlear nucleus
WR Lippe, DS Fuhrmann, W Yang and EW Rubel
Department of Otolaryngology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle 98195.
Nucleus magnocellularis (NM), a second-order nucleus in the chick auditory
system, is topographically and tonotopically organized. The basilar papilla
(cochlea) projects onto the ipsilateral NM via the auditory nerve. The
anteromedial region of NM is innervated by the proximal end of the basilar
papilla and responds to high-frequency sounds; more posterolateral regions
receive input from more distal locations along the papilla and respond to
progressively lower frequencies. NM projects exclusively to the third-order
neurons of nucleus laminaris (NL). Otocyst removal prevents the formation
of the ipsilateral cochlea and cochlear nerve and results in the
development of an aberrant functional projection from the contralateral NM
to the "deafferented" NM on the operated side of the brain (Jackson and
Parks, 1988). In the present experiment, the otocyst was removed
unilaterally and the tonotopic organization of the deafferented NM was
physiologically mapped at 17-18 d of embryonic age (E17-E18). Quantitative
analyses revealed that the frequency organization of the deafferented NM is
almost identical to that in normal embryos. Progressively higher
characteristic frequencies were recorded at successively more anterior and
more medial locations in the nucleus, and the orientation of the tonotopic
axis was indistinguishable from normal. Furthermore, the correlation
between characteristic frequency and anatomical location is comparable in
the deafferented (r = 0.91) and normal (r = 0.87) NM. The only noticeable
discrepancy is that characteristic frequencies in NM on both sides of the
brain of operated embryos are higher than the frequencies observed
previously at comparable regions of the nucleus in unoperated
controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)