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Volume 16, Number 9,
Issue of May 1, 1996
pp. 3009-3018
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Whole-Cell Patch-Clamp Recording Reveals Subthreshold
Sound-Evoked Postsynaptic Currents in the Inferior Colliculus of
Awake Bats
Ellen Covey,
Julie A. Kauer, and
John H. Casseday
Department of Neurobiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham,
North Carolina 27710
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
The inferior colliculus receives excitatory and inhibitory input
from parallel auditory pathways that differ in discharge patterns,
latencies, and binaural properties. Processing in the inferior
colliculus may depend on the temporal sequence in which excitatory and
inhibitory synaptic inputs are activated and on the resulting balance
between excitation and inhibition. To explore this issue at the
cellular level, we used the novel approach of whole-cell patch-clamp
recording in the midbrain of awake bats (Eptesicus fuscus)
to record EPSCs or IPSCs. Sound-evoked EPSCs were recorded in most
neurons. These EPSCs were frequently preceded by an IPSC, followed by
an IPSC, or both. These findings help explain the large latency range
and transient responses that characterize inferior colliculus neurons.
The EPSC was sometimes followed by long-lasting oscillatory currents,
suggesting that a single brief sound sets up a pattern of altered
excitability that persists far beyond the duration of the initial
sound. In three binaural neurons, ipsilateral sound evoked a large IPSC
that partially or totally canceled the EPSC evoked by contralateral
sound. In one binaural neuron with ipsilaterally evoked IPSCs,
contralaterally evoked IPSCs occurred in response to frequencies above
and below the neuron's best frequency. Thus, both monaural and
binaural interactions can occur at single inferior colliculus neurons.
These results show that whole-cell patch-clamp recording offers a
powerful means of understanding how subthreshold processes determine
the responses of auditory neurons.
Key words:
in vivo whole-cell patch-clamp
recording;
intracellular recording;
inferior colliculus;
auditory
midbrain;
postsynaptic currents;
central auditory system
INTRODUCTION
The inferior colliculus (IC) is one of the main
integrative centers for auditory information in the mammalian brain. It
provides nearly all of the input to the thalamocortical pathway, as
well as direct outputs to systems concerned with sensorimotor
integration. The IC is the target of at least a dozen anatomically and
functionally distinct pathways, some or all of which may converge at
the level of a single cell. Some input pathways are excitatory, others
inhibitory. Neurons in different input pathways have different
discharge patterns, and their activity occurs at different times
relative to sound onset. The inputs to a single IC region or cell may
differ in frequency tuning, thresholds, rate-level functions, and
binaural properties. A major issue in understanding central auditory
processing is how multiple synaptic inputs converge and interact to
shape the response properties of IC neurons (Covey and Casseday, 1995 ;
Casseday and Covey, 1996a ,b).
There is evidence that synaptic inhibition plays a key role in the
integration process. The IC contains both GABAergic and glycinergic
terminals (Roberts and Ribak, 1987 ; Winer et al., 1995 ) and receptors
(Glendenning and Baker, 1988 ; Edgar and Schwartz, 1990 ; Fubara et al.,
in press). Blocking either GABAA or glycine
receptors can decrease response latency (Faingold et al., 1991 ; Park
and Pollak, 1993b ), broaden frequency tuning curves (Yang et al.,
1992 ), change binaural properties (Vater et al., 1992 ; Park and Pollak,
1993a ), or change monaural properties (Pollak and Park, 1993 ; Casseday
et al., 1994 ).
Although neuropharmacological methods indicate that inhibition is
involved in integrative processing at the IC, we still lack direct
evidence about the mechanisms that determine when an action potential
occurs. It is especially important to observe processes that operate
below spike threshold under normal conditions, because they provide
information about the underlying dynamic balance between excitation and
inhibition. The most direct way to address this issue is through
intracellular recording.
To date there have been only two published studies of intracellular
recordings from IC neurons in mammals, both in anesthetized cats
(Nelson and Erulkar, 1963 ; Kuwada et al., 1980 ). This paucity of
intracellular evidence may be because cells are often damaged when
impaled with sharp electrodes (Marty and Neher, 1983 ). Because of the
success of whole-cell patch-clamp recording in isolated or cultured
cells (Hamill et al., 1981 ; Fenwick et al., 1982a ,b; Sakmann et al.,
1982 ), brain slices (Blanton et al., 1989 ), and neurons in the visual
cortex of anesthetized animals (Ferster and Jagadeesh, 1992 ; Jagadeesh
et al., 1992 , 1993 ), we explored this technique in the IC of awake
animals. The whole-cell recording method allows long-duration
recordings from healthy cells, and the low-resistance electrodes offer
superior signal-to-noise properties. This report provides the first
evidence that whole-cell patch-clamp recording in the midbrain of awake
animals can be used to examine sensory integration. To make this point,
we show how several different intracellular response properties can
explain findings obtained with extracellular recording methods.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
The methods for surgical preparation of animals and acoustic
stimulation were essentially the same as those previously described in
detail for extracellular recording (Covey, 1993 ). On the day before
recording, the animal was anesthetized with a combination of Metofane
(methoxyflurane) and Innovar-Vet (fentanyl, 0.4 mg/ml + droperidol, 20 mg/ml; 0.125 ml/kg). Local anesthetic (Xylocaine) was applied to the
scalp. A metal post was attached to the surface of the skull with
cyanoacrylate gel adhesive. When fixed in the stereotaxic apparatus
with a screw, the post served to immobilize the animal's head. On the
next day, before placement in the stereotaxic device, the bat was
tranquilized with Innovar-Vet. During recording, local anesthetic was
applied to the scalp incision.
During stimulation and recording, the bat was inside a
sound-attenuating chamber. The electronic apparatus for generating
signals and for electrophysiological recording was outside the chamber.
During the recording session, the bat was restrained in a foam-lined
holder molded to the shape of the body to hold it firmly but
comfortably. The holder was suspended in an elastic sling to damp
movements. Water was offered at regular intervals during the recording
session. If the bat showed signs of restlessness, the session was
terminated. Each recording session was 6 hr in duration. Between
recording sessions, bats were housed in individual cages and given free
access to food and water.
The IC of this species is not covered by neocortex or cerebellum, and
it is visible through the skull. This superficial location, together
with the small size of the brain, allows sampling of most or all of the
IC through a small opening in the skull and dura. The preparation is
mechanically very stable, with little movement caused by pulsation. To
keep the surface of the brain moist and free of debris, the opening in
the skull was covered with gel foam soaked in physiological saline
solution at all times unless an electrode was inserted. Glass
electrodes were double-pulled on a Brown-Flaming P-87 horizontal
electrode puller. The tips of the electrodes were ~1 µm in diameter
and had resistances of 7-10 M when filled with internal solution.
The internal solution contained (in mM): 110 cesium gluconate, 11 EGTA, 10 CsCl2, 1 MgCl2, 1 CaCl2, 10 HEPES, 2 ATP, and 0.3 GTP. The pH was adjusted to 7.2, and the osmotic pressure
to 280 mOsm. The formulation of the internal solution was optimized by
trial and error. A cesium-based solution was chosen primarily because
it was easier to form high-resistance seals using this solution than
with solutions based on potassium. Cesium blocks some voltage-gated
K+ currents; dialysis of the intracellular milieu
eliminates, or ``washes out,'' synaptic responses attributable to
G-protein-coupled receptors and may also reduce the contribution of
some voltage-dependent ion channels. These characteristics have the
advantage of permitting us to examine primarily ligand-gated currents
and thus characterize fast synaptic inputs to the cell. A disadvantage
is that we cannot fully characterize the natural course of spike
generation, but this was not the primary aim of the study. The internal
solution was prepared in advance, aliquoted, and stored for a maximum
of 4 weeks at 20°C. In some experiments, 4% biocytin was added to
the internal solution immediately before recording.
Recordings were made using an Axopatch 1-D patch-clamp amplifier. The
head stage was attached to a custom-made clamp designed to fit on a
Kopf hydraulic microdrive, so the electrode could be advanced by remote
control from outside the sound-attenuating chamber. Pressure and
suction were also applied to the electrode from outside the
sound-attenuating chamber via plastic tubing run through a port in the
chamber wall. Unless otherwise stated, recordings were made in
voltage-clamp mode. Data were digitized using a 16-bit
analog-to-digital converter (A-D3, Tucker-Davis Technologies,
Gainesville, FL) and collected using custom software developed in our
laboratory.
The micropipette was positioned under visual control just above the
surface of the IC. To prevent clogging, positive pressure was applied
to the micropipette before lowering it into the tissue. The pressure
was released after the tip reached an area from which recordings could
be obtained. For many cells, it was possible to observe action
potentials recorded extracellularly with the patch-clamp electrode
before a seal was formed. These observations provided information about
basic response properties of the cell, such as its best excitatory
frequency and threshold, whether it was spontaneously active, and
whether it was duration-tuned.
After a gigaohm seal was formed, breakthrough to whole-cell mode was
achieved by applying gentle suction. In whole-cell mode, the resting
membrane potential was measured and the cell was clamped at this
resting potential during recording. Because of errors introduced by
series resistance and dialysis of the cell by the cesium-containing
internal solution, the precise membrane potential was not determined.
Measured membrane potentials ranged from 30 to 74 mV, with an
average value of 56.8 ± 13 mV (SD). Data were not collected from
cells with measured membrane potentials more positive than 30 mV,
because it was assumed that they were damaged. All neurons from which
recordings were obtained could be depolarized to threshold and thereby
induced to fire action potentials. We were able to obtain stable
whole-cell recordings from IC neurons for periods ranging from 10 min
to 2.5 hr. In all of the neurons from which we recorded, both inward
and outward currents were observed in response to sound. Voltage-clamp
recordings were generally used to minimize the contribution of
voltage-dependent currents and to more accurately measure the time
course of synaptic currents. Because most neurons in the IC have
extensive dendritic trees, voltage control was usually incomplete,
allowing action potentials to escape clamp when the cell was
depolarized by synaptic input. The outward currents we recorded are
likely to be IPSCs attributable to activation of GABA or glycine
receptors, and the inward currents are likely to be glutamatergic
EPSCs. When using the terms ``inhibition'' or ``excitation,'' we
refer to the net effect of all the inputs, excitatory and
inhibitory.
Auditory stimuli were generated using two digital signal processors,
each of which controlled a digital-to-analog converter (DA)
(Tucker-Davis Technologies), which were in turn controlled by custom
software run on a Gateway 486 computer. The outputs of the DAs were
routed through antialiasing filters to digitally controlled
attenuators, amplified, and routed through a second set of attenuators
to the loudspeakers at the two ears. Types of stimuli included pure
tones, white noise, clicks, frequency modulated sweeps, sinusoidally
amplitude-modulated signals (SAMs), and sinusoidally
frequency-modulated signals (SFMs). For most experiments, a rise-fall
time of 0.5 msec was used. Stimuli always started at the zero crossing
point of the sine wave. Presentation rate was ~1/sec or less. Sounds
were presented via Brüel and Kjaer 1/4-inch condenser
microphones, modified for use as loudspeakers, and placed within the
cone of the bat's pinna, as close as possible to the external ear
canal. The outputs of the loudspeakers were measured with a 1/8-inch
Brüel and Kjaer microphone and found to be flat ±5 dB between 20 and 100 kHz, the frequency range used in the experiments. Using
measurements taken in 1 kHz steps, attenuator settings were converted
to sound pressure level (SPL; re20 µPa).
After the final recording session, animals were administered a lethal
dose of Nembutal (pentobarbital) and perfused through the heart with
PBS followed by a fixation solution containing 4% paraformaldehyde in
PBS. After perfusion, the brain was removed and stored overnight in
30% sucrose in PBS. Sections were cut 40 µm thick on a freezing
microtome. To visualize cells labeled with biocytin, sections were
reacted with avidin-biotin complex (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame,
CA) (Hsu et al., 1981 ).
RESULTS
The data reported here are based on recordings from 20 IC neurons
in 13 animals. All of these neurons were in the dorsal half of the IC.
In Eptesicus, the IC measures ~2 mm in its entire
dorsal-to-ventral extent. The depths of recordings ranged from 81 to
934 µm, with all but four between 100 and 300 µm. Many (13 of 20)
of the neurons had at least occasional spontaneous EPSCs that caused
breakaway action potentials to occur. Fewer neurons (3 of 20) had
obvious spontaneous IPSCs. Three neurons had a very high rate of
spontaneous spiking activity, and six showed no evidence of any
spontaneous excitatory or inhibitory activity. These results are
consistent with extracellular recordings in the IC that show that some
spontaneous activity is present in the majority of neurons, but most
neurons have low levels of spontaneous activity.
Stimulus-evoked contralateral excitation and inhibition
All but two neurons (18 of 20, or 90%) received contralateral
excitatory input as seen in EPSCs evoked by sound presented to the
contralateral ear. Often, these EPSCs were rapid and large enough to
cause the neuron to reach spike threshold. This finding is
qualitatively similar to all of the published extracellular recording
data showing that the majority of IC neurons are excited by sound at
the contralateral ear.
For 15 neurons, sufficient data were obtained to analyze the sequence
of excitation and inhibition in response to sound at the contralateral
ear under multiple stimulus conditions. For 13 (87%), some stimulus
conditions at the contralateral ear elicited IPSCs. As shown below, the
time of occurrence of the IPSC was variable with respect to the
EPSC.
Leading inhibition
Figure 1 illustrates an example of the response of
a neuron with a short-latency IPSC followed by an EPSC. For this
neuron, the IPSC began ~8 msec after the onset of a tone burst,
reached a peak at ~11 msec, and was followed by an EPSC and spikes at
~20 msec after stimulus onset. A similar pattern of an early IPSC
followed by an EPSC was seen in 6 of 15 neurons under at least some
stimulus conditions. We call this type of inhibition ``leading
inhibition'' to distinguish it from ``lagging inhibition,'' which
followed excitation.
Fig. 1.
Response of an IC neuron to a 10 msec pure-tone
burst, showing a short-latency IPSC followed by an EPSC. Recording was
in voltage-clamp mode, with the cell held at its resting membrane
potential of 65 mV. On this and subsequent figures, the
vertical scale bar indicates current in picoamperes
(pA) and the thick bar on the horizontal
axis indicates the duration of the stimulus. In this and
subsequent figures, upward deflections represent outward
current or IPSCs. Downward deflections represent inward
current or EPSCs.
[View Larger Version of this Image (15K GIF file)]
Assuming that leading inhibition is caused by release of GABA or
glycine and acts via chloride channels, it should not have been
affected by the presence of cesium in the electrode. Moreover, the
finding of short-latency inhibition in IC neurons is consistent with
extracellular recording studies that show that some IC neurons
discharge earlier in response to sound when GABA or glycine receptor
antagonists are applied (Johnson, 1993 ; Park and Pollak, 1993b ).
In some cases, leading inhibition was clearly responsible for
lengthening the latency of the EPSC. Figure 2 shows an
example of a neuron in which leading inhibition grew as the sound level
of the stimulus increased. This neuron exhibited an increase in
first-spike latency with increasing SPL, a phenomenon known as
``paradoxical latency shift'' (Sullivan, 1982 ). Paradoxical latency
shift is sometimes seen in extracellular recordings from neurons at
cortical (Sullivan, 1982 ) and subcortical (Covey, 1993 ) levels of the
auditory system. The term ``paradoxical'' refers to the fact that the
relationship between sound level and latency is the opposite of that
seen in auditory nerve fibers and in most central auditory neurons. At
45 dB SPL, 10 dB above threshold, this neuron showed no evidence of an
initial IPSC and fired action potentials with a latency of 15 msec. As
sound level was increased to 65 dB SPL, an IPSC appeared to cancel most
of the initial portion of the excitation, eliminating the first spikes,
so that response latency lengthened to 27 msec. Further increases in
SPL resulted in a lengthening of the duration of the IPSC so that by 85 dB SPL, the response latency had lengthened to 30 msec. Note that sound
level had little effect on the timing of the last spike.
Fig. 2.
Growth of inhibition and increase in spike latency
in response to 5 msec pure-tone stimuli as SPL was increased. The SPL
was increased from 45 dB (10 dB above threshold, top trace)
to 85 dB. First-spike latency is indicated by the arrow on
each trace. The resting potential of this neuron was 70 mV. Spikes
have been truncated.
[View Larger Version of this Image (19K GIF file)]
Lagging inhibition
Figure 3 shows an example of a neuron that
responded to a 20 msec pure tone with an outward current that followed
the EPSC and spikes. Similar outward currents that followed an EPSC
under at least some stimulus conditions were seen in 12 of 15 neurons
(80%). As in the case of leading inhibition, if the IPSC that followed
the EPSC was attributable to GABAergic or glycinergic synaptic input,
it should not have been affected by the presence of cesium in the
electrode. The duration of the lagging inhibition ranged from ~5 msec
to at least 150 msec, the longest recording period used. In five
neurons, the EPSC was flanked by both early and late inhibition as in
Figure 3; in seven neurons, only lagging inhibition was seen.
Extracellular recordings have shown that applying antagonists of GABA
or glycine receptors causes transient onset responses to lengthen
(Faingold et al., 1991 ; Johnson, 1993 ; Pollak and Park, 1993 ) and
suggests that the lagging inhibition seen in our recordings was
attributable to synaptic input.
Fig. 3.
The same neuron illustrated in Figure 1 responded
to a 20 msec pure tone with a small, short-latency IPSC (latency = 8.2 msec) followed by an EPSC correlated with sound offset (latency to
spike = 29.4 msec). The EPSC was followed by a second IPSC
(arrow) that lasted for ~20 msec. To better illustrate the
late IPSC, a thin line is drawn through the baseline. Spikes
have been truncated.
[View Larger Version of this Image (16K GIF file)]
For neurons like the one shown in Figure 3, the fact that there is
outward current both before and after the EPSC raises the question of
whether early and late inhibition are caused by separate inputs or
whether they represent the beginning and end of a single, long-lasting
IPSC triggered by stimulus onset and interrupted by a large,
short-duration EPSC. Although K+ currents were
theoretically blocked in our experiments because of the presence of
cesium in the electrode, we cannot rule out the possibility that some
intrinsic conductances remained active. Thus, the late outward current
might have been afterhyperpolarization after the synaptically mediated
EPSC. To resolve this issue, it will be necessary in future experiments
to use methods to block different specific intrinsic conductances and
to look at differences between spontaneous and evoked spikes.
Inhibitory effects in the absence of synaptic inhibition
Figure 4 illustrates that it is possible to
distinguish between inhibition occurring at IC neurons and inhibition
that has occurred elsewhere. The neuron in Figure 4 had a very high
rate of spontaneous EPSCs and action potentials that could be observed
in extracellular recording before seal formation, as well as
intracellularly (top trace). This spontaneous activity was
completely eliminated by presentation of a sound at the contralateral
ear. Because there was little evidence of synaptic inhibition in either
voltage-clamp mode (middle trace) or current-clamp mode
(bottom trace), it seems likely that this neuron received
excitatory input from a second, tonically active neuron that was
inhibited by sound at the contralateral ear. It is very unlikely that
the high rate of spontaneous activity could have been attributable to
injury because we were able to obtain stable and reliable recordings
for >1 hr. One other neuron had a similar high level of spontaneous
activity but did not show any obvious response to any of the auditory
stimuli tested. Even in extracellular recording experiments, IC neurons
with very high spontaneous activity are sometimes encountered,
especially in the dorsal part of the IC, where most of our patch-clamp
recordings were obtained.
Fig. 4.
Inhibition of spiking in a neuron with a high rate
of spontaneous activity. The top trace shows spontaneous
activity in the absence of a stimulus; the middle and
bottom traces show the neuron's response to 50 msec pure
tones. The middle trace was recorded in voltage-clamp mode,
the bottom trace in current-clamp mode. The resting
potential of this neuron was 65 mV.
[View Larger Version of this Image (24K GIF file)]
Poststimulus oscillations
Figure 5 shows the response of a neuron in which
prolonged oscillations followed the response to a 20 msec pure tone and
persisted for at least 100 msec after the end of the EPSC. For this
neuron, the oscillations occurred at a rate of ~30 Hz. The
oscillations were present across a wide range of stimulus amplitudes
starting at 10 dB above threshold, and across a wide range of
frequencies. Of the neurons from which we recorded, nearly half (7 of
15) had oscillatory currents that persisted for a prolonged time period
after the excitatory component of the response. The observation of
oscillatory currents after responses to sound is consistent with
extracellular studies showing that some IC neurons undergo periodic
waxing and waning of responsiveness to the second of a pair of tones
separated by a variable interval (Grinnell, 1963 ; Suga, 1964 ).
Fig. 5.
Response of an IC neuron that exhibited
oscillations after the excitatory response evoked by a 20 msec pure
tone. The top trace was recorded in the absence of a
stimulus. The bottom trace shows the neuron's response to a
tone. The oscillations (arrows) occurred at a rate of ~30
Hz and persisted for at least 100 msec. The resting potential of this
neuron was 64 mV.
[View Larger Version of this Image (23K GIF file)]
Although the oscillations appear to be caused by periodic outward
currents, they could represent either delayed synaptic inputs or
intrinsic oscillatory properties of the cell triggered by the
synaptically mediated EPSC. Further experiments will be necessary to
determine the origin of the oscillations, including depolarizing the
cell to determine whether oscillations follow spikes that are not
synaptically mediated.
Frequency tuning: inhibitory side bands
For all of the neurons from which we recorded, the sequence and
time course of inhibitory and excitatory synaptic events varied
considerably as a function of stimulus parameters such as SPL,
duration, and frequency. For eight neurons, frequency was varied
systematically so that responses were recorded not only within the
excitatory portion of the tuning curve, but also at frequencies above
and below. All of these neurons exhibited EPSCs evoked by sound over
some range of frequencies. Six neurons responded with clear
sound-evoked IPSCs at frequencies above and below the bandwidth that
produced an EPSC. Two neurons did not show any evidence of sound-evoked
IPSCs at frequencies above or below the excitatory region. Figure
6 illustrates the responses of a neuron the best
frequency of which, as defined by spike output, was 26 kHz. At this
frequency, the neuron responded with an EPSC accompanied by action
potentials (lower trace). Decreasing the frequency by 1 kHz,
to 25 kHz (top trace), the response changed from robust
excitation to an IPSC with a latency slightly longer than that of the
EPSC evoked by 26 kHz. At frequencies higher than the neuron's
excitatory range, an IPSC also appeared (middle trace). The
latency of the IPSC evoked by 29 kHz was longer than that of the IPSC
evoked by 25 kHz. At frequencies both above and below the excitatory
range, no initial inward current was present, suggesting that the
excitatory input to the neuron was inactive at these frequencies, not
simply canceled by the IPSC. In 6 of 10 trials, a spike followed the
IPSC, either from delayed excitatory input at this frequency or rebound
from inhibition.
Fig. 6.
Responses of an IC neuron to a 5 msec pure tone at
different frequencies. Note that frequencies are arranged in
nonsequential order. The response to a tone at the neuron's best
frequency (26 kHz, bottom trace) was almost exclusively
excitatory. A tone above best frequency (29 kHz, middle
trace) elicited a long-latency IPSC. A tone below best frequency
(25 kHz, top trace) elicited a short-latency IPSC. This
neuron's resting potential was 70 mV. Spikes have been
truncated.
[View Larger Version of this Image (19K GIF file)]
A delicate balance of inhibition and excitation is revealed by
changes in sound level
For some neurons, it was possible to determine that the amplitude
of sound influenced the relative proportion of synaptic inhibition and
excitation. In extracellular studies of the IC, it is common to find
neurons with an upper spike threshold for sound level so that they fire
only when sound level is within an intermediate range (Casseday and
Covey, 1992 ). This means that they have closed frequency tuning curves.
Eight neurons with closed tuning curves were tested over a wide range
of sound amplitudes that began below the lower excitatory threshold and
extended above the upper excitatory threshold.
Figure 7 shows an example of such a neuron that
responded with an IPSC at high sound levels above its upper spike
threshold, but not below. For this neuron, at 24 dB SPL, there was
essentially no synaptic response. At 34-44 dB SPL, there was a small
short-latency IPSC followed immediately by an EPSC and spikes. At 54 dB
SPL, the EPSC had almost entirely disappeared, but the IPSC persisted,
and no spike was evoked at this or higher sound levels. The
predominance of the IPSC at high sound levels presumably is responsible
for the limited dynamic range of the spike output in cells with closed
tuning curves.
Fig. 7.
Responses of an IC neuron to a 5 msec pure tone at
different sound levels. The traces are arranged with low sound levels
at the bottom and high sound levels at the top.
There are no spikes in the top or bottom trace.
The arrow points to the IPSC that persisted at high sound
levels above the upper excitatory threshold of the neuron. This neuron
had a resting potential of 59 mV. Spikes in the trace at 34 dB SPL
have been truncated.
[View Larger Version of this Image (19K GIF file)]
Figure 8 shows the responses of a duration-tuned neuron
tested at a long sound duration that did not elicit spikes. In this
neuron, the balance of inhibition and excitation was reversed from that
in the previous example. For this neuron, the inhibitory threshold was
lower than the excitatory threshold. At 41 dB SPL, the only response
was a small IPSC with a latency of 8.6 msec. At 51 dB SPL, the initial
IPSC was larger, and a late inward current appeared, correlated in time
with sound offset. By 71 dB SPL, the initial IPSC had disappeared, and
at 81 and 91 dB SPL it was replaced by a short-latency EPSC. Note that
although this cell received both excitatory and inhibitory inputs over
a dynamic range of 50 dB, the balance of excitation to inhibition
offset one another, so that the neuron never produced a spike.
Fig. 8.
Responses of the same IC neuron illustrated in
Figure 1 to a 40 msec pure tone at different sound levels. The traces
are arranged with low levels at the bottom and high levels
at the top. The arrow points to the IPSC that was
present at low sound levels.
[View Larger Version of this Image (26K GIF file)]
Duration tuning
Extracellular recordings show that approximately one-third of all
IC neurons in Eptesicus are tuned to specific sound
durations (Casseday et al., 1994 ). Figure 9 shows the
responses of a duration-tuned neuron to pure tones of different
durations. Extracellular recordings before seal formation showed that
this neuron was duration-tuned with a best duration of ~10 msec. This
neuron responded to all sounds with an initial short-latency IPSC that
began at 8-9 msec after sound onset. An EPSC occurred later with a
latency that was clearly correlated with the offset of the sound. For a
5 msec stimulus, the EPSC immediately followed the initial IPSC, but
there were seldom any spikes. For a 10 msec stimulus, the EPSC latency
was longer, and the neuron fired multiple spikes. For a 20 msec
stimulus, the latency of the EPSC was still greater, and the neuron
only occasionally fired 1-2 spikes. As stimulus duration was increased
to 30 and 40 msec, the EPSC latency became progressively longer and its
magnitude smaller. Spikes were rarely fired in response to these
long-duration stimuli (see Fig. 8). One interpretation of this behavior
is that the duration tuning of this neuron was attributable to three
stimulus-locked events: (1) an initial inhibitory input that lasts as
long as the sound, seen as the initial IPSC; (2) a transient excitatory
input, the latency of which is correlated with stimulus onset, but
which arrives later than the initial inhibitory input and either
counterbalances it or results in a small net inward current; and (3) an
offset excitation, seen as inward current correlated with the time of
sound offset. Because the onset EPSC is counterbalanced by inhibition,
it alone is never sufficient to cause the neuron to fire. The offset
excitation alone is also subthreshold. Only when sound duration is such
that the onset excitation coincides with the offset excitation does the
neuron reach its spike threshold and fire. The validity of this or
other models could be tested in future experiments through manipulation
of the reversal potential for the IPSC.
Fig. 9.
Responses of the same IC neuron shown in Figure 1
to pure tones of different durations. The traces are arranged with
short durations at the top and long durations at the
bottom. The bar above each trace indicates the
sound duration.
[View Larger Version of this Image (20K GIF file)]
Responses to modulated stimuli
Most neurons in the IC respond only to the onset of sound. We
tested one such neuron with SAM. Figure 10 shows the
responses of this neuron to SAM stimuli at different modulation rates.
The neuron had a low-pass characteristic, responding with an onset
discharge to modulation frequencies of 120 Hz. After the onset
response, there was a cyclic pattern of synaptic currents that
persisted throughout the entire duration of the stimulus and followed
the modulation cycles of the signal. The cyclical modulations were most
prominent at 30 and 60 Hz. At 100 Hz, the synchrony became degraded
over the course of the response. The cyclic response pattern appeared
to be attributable to periodic inward currents, the form and time
course of which approximated the amplitude envelope of the stimulus,
interspersed with periodic returns to baseline. This cyclic activity
suggests that the neuron received excitatory inputs from neurons that
responded to the amplitude-modulated stimulus in a phase-locked
manner.
Fig. 10.
Responses of an IC neuron to 100 msec SAM signals
modulated at three different rates. The carrier frequency was 26 kHz,
and the sound level was 35 dB SPL. The modulation rates are indicated
at the right of each trace. The resting potential of the
neuron was 67 mV.
[View Larger Version of this Image (17K GIF file)]
A similar cyclic pattern was seen in the responses of this neuron to an
SFM stimulus and in the responses of one other neuron that we tested
with SAM and SFM stimuli. Neither of these neurons appeared to be
specialized for modulated stimuli because they also responded to pure
tones.
The pattern of synaptic currents seen in response to the SAM signal
suggested that this neuron received an input signal, the magnitude of
which was proportional to the amplitude envelope of the stimulus. To
further test this idea, we varied the rise time of a 100 msec pure
tone. The neuron's responses to variations in the rise time are shown
in Figure 11. As would be predicted if the response
were proportional to the amplitude of the envelope, the longer the rise
time the more gradual was the slope of the EPSC leading to the point at
which the neuron spiked. After the burst of spikes, a small EPSC
gradually decayed throughout the remainder of the stimulus
duration.
Fig. 11.
Responses of the same neuron illustrated in
Figure 10 to changes in the rise time of a 100 msec pure tone at 26 kHz
and 35 dB SPL. Shaded symbols indicate the rise time over
which sound amplitude was increased.
[View Larger Version of this Image (20K GIF file)]
Binaural interactions
For two neurons, we were able to obtain series of recordings that
showed clear evidence of binaural interaction based on EPSCs evoked by
contralateral stimuli and IPSCs evoked by ipsilateral stimuli.
Both neurons responded in a very similar way to binaural stimulation.
Figure 12 shows the responses of one neuron to various
combinations of ipsilateral and contralateral sound. The contralateral
stimulus alone at a sound level of 45 dB SPL elicited a large EPSC and
a burst of spikes (Fig. 12A). Evidence of binaural
inhibition first became apparent when the ipsilateral level was set at
10 dB above that of the contralateral stimulus (Fig. 12B).
This binaural combination partially canceled the later part of the
EPSC. When the contralateral stimulus was turned off but the
ipsilateral stimulus remained at the same level (Fig. 12C),
there was a small, rather variable IPSC that was sometimes followed by
a spike. When the level of the ipsilateral stimulus was increased to 20 dB above that of the contralateral one (Fig. 12D), the EPSC
and spikes were completely eliminated, and only a long-lasting IPSC was
present. The ipsilateral sound alone at this level (Fig.
12E) elicited a large sustained IPSC, sometimes followed by
a spike. The long time course of these responses is significant because
the duration of this IPSC was longer than that of the contralaterally
evoked EPSC. When a spike occurred after the IPSC, it was >50 msec
after stimulus onset. In addition, the size of the ipsilaterally evoked
IPSCs in the neurons in which they were observed was typically larger
than that of any of the contralaterally evoked IPSCs in other neurons.
A similar pattern of contralateral excitation and ipsilateral
inhibition, including the long-latency spike after ipsilateral sound,
was observed in one other cell. The long-latency spike never occurred
in response to the contralateral sound, suggesting that there may be
some lagging inhibition in the contralateral input. If these temporal
properties of excitation and inhibition are typical of binaural cells
in the IC, then the time frame over which these cells integrate
binaural information must be much longer than previously realized.
Fig. 12.
Binaural interaction in an IC neuron that
responded to contralateral sounds with an EPSC and ipsilateral sounds
with an IPSC. In the traces in the left column, the
contralateral sound is a 5 msec pure tone at 27 kHz and 45 dB SPL,
either alone (top trace) or in combination with a
simultaneous ipsilateral tone of the same frequency at the sound levels
indicated. The traces on the right show the responses to
ipsilateral tones alone. The resting potential of this neuron was 70
mV. Spikes in all traces have been truncated.
[View Larger Version of this Image (22K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
We began this study as a search for an efficient method to test
the idea that the different types of highly specialized processing
found in the IC are created through convergence of excitatory and
inhibitory synaptic inputs. Although only a few types of such
specialized processing are described here, in the following discussion
we show how this method can answer fundamental questions concerning the
integration of sensory information.
Temporal interplay of monaural excitation and inhibition
Some of the most interesting questions concerning integrative
processes in the CNS have to do with the mechanisms for processing
time-varying information. In audition, time-varying parameters can be
as simple as the duration of a pure tone or as complex as the pattern
of spectral-temporal changes in speech or music. One fundamental
mechanism that may underlie the processing of time-varying information
is the convergence of inputs from neural delay lines. These inputs may
be inhibitory or excitatory, and they may be transient or sustained
(Casseday and Covey, 1996b ). Our results directly reveal mechanisms for
creating delays, modifying discharge patterns, and establishing tuning
for specific features of sound such as duration.
Leading inhibition
For approximately one-third of the neurons in our study, the
earliest response to sound was an IPSC. This finding provides direct
evidence that IC neurons receive short-latency inhibitory input that
lengthens response latency. In the IC, the range of latencies is
considerably larger than would be expected from synaptic delays and
axon length (Haplea et al., 1994 ; Casseday and Covey, 1996b ).
First-spike latency of IC neurons decreases when either GABAergic or
glycinergic inhibition is blocked (Johnson, 1993 ; Park and Pollak,
1993b ; Casseday and Covey, 1996a ). Intracellular recording in
anesthetized cats has shown sound-evoked IPSPs preceding EPSPs (Nelson
and Erulkar, 1963 ).
These results demonstrate an important new principle. The balance
between excitation and inhibition can vary systematically as a function
of stimulus parameters. For example, in a neuron that exhibited
``paradoxical latency shift'' (Sullivan, 1982 ), the magnitude and
duration of leading inhibition increased as a function of sound level,
causing response latency to increase.
Lagging inhibition
A long-lasting outward current commonly followed sound-evoked
spikes. The magnitude and time course of this current varied as a
function of parametric changes in stimulus conditions. These results
may explain the finding that the majority of IC neurons respond
transiently to sound, even though the majority of auditory neurons at
lower levels respond with a sustained discharge (Rose et al., 1963 ).
Nelson and Erulkar (1963) showed that in the IC of the anesthetized
cat, long-lasting hyperpolarization followed spikes evoked by clicks,
but did not follow spontaneous spikes. Kuwada et al. (1980) showed
intracellular recordings from one IC neuron that responded to sound
with a transient burst of action potentials followed by a period of
hyperpolarization ~100 msec in duration. Local blocking of GABA or
glycine causes some transient onset responses to lengthen, indicating
that excitatory input is sustained (Faingold et al., 1991 ; Johnson,
1993 ; Pollak and Park, 1993 ).
Many IC neurons cannot follow repetition rates above a few hundred
Hertz, whereas the responses of most neurons at lower levels to
modulated stimuli are constrained only by their refractory periods.
Although they may not fire on every cycle, these neurons continue to
phase-lock at rates up to several thousand Hertz (Grinnell, 1963 ; Suga,
1964 ; Casseday and Covey, 1996a ). In our study, the long periods of
postexcitatory inhibition, 5 msec to >150 msec, provide an explanation
for this limitation in response to high repetition rates.
Oscillations
Oscillatory currents that follow an EPSC may be the mechanism that
underlies the observation that IC neurons respond only over a low and
limited range of modulation rates. They may also underlie the
observation that the response to the second sound of a pair may
alternate between periods of recovery or enhancement and periods of
suppression (Grinnell, 1963 ; Suga, 1964 ). Many aspects of sound-evoked
oscillations remain to be understood, including the issue of whether
they are synaptic or intrinsic in their origin.
Duration tuning
Approximately one-third of the neurons in the IC of
Eptesicus respond only to a narrow range of sound durations
and do not respond to shorter or longer durations. The responses of
duration-tuned neurons are transient and their latency is always longer
than their best duration. Local blocking of GABA or glycine abolishes
duration tuning (Casseday et al., 1994 ). Whole-cell recording on a
typical duration-tuned cell showed that leading inhibition dominated
the early part of the response and that there was an inward current
associated with sound offset. These observations demonstrate the
importance of the interaction of excitatory and inhibitory inputs
offset in time from one another in creating tuning to simple temporal
features of a stimulus (Casseday and Covey, 1996a ).
Spectral-temporal interactions
Our results show that IC neurons receive synaptic inputs from
sources tuned to different frequencies. Furthermore, these different
inputs may have different thresholds, different latencies, and
different time courses. Many IC neurons have inhibitory areas
surrounding their excitatory frequency areas (Casseday and Covey,
1992 ). Pharmacological studies of IC neurons have shown that blocking
inhibition may cause the frequency response area to broaden or the
threshold to decrease (Faingold et al., 1991 ; Vater et al., 1992 ; Yang
et al., 1992 ). Although one important function of inhibition may be to
shape the frequency tuning curve, our data suggest that another
function may be to tune IC neurons to specific directions or rates of
frequency change. The IC contains neurons that respond only to an
upward or downward frequency sweep; some of these neurons only respond
to a specific sweep duration (Grinnell, 1963 ; Suga, 1964 ; Casseday and
Covey, 1992 ; Casseday et al., 1994 ; Fuzessery, 1994 ). The whole-cell
method offers an experimental strategy for testing different models for
the creation of tuning to the direction of a frequency sweep
(Fuzessery, 1994 ; Casseday and Covey, 1996a ).
Binaural interaction of excitation and inhibition
Although the first stages of binaural processing clearly occur
below the IC, neuropharmacological studies (Faingold et al., 1991 ; Park
and Pollak, 1993a ) and intracellular recording (Nelson and Erulkar,
1963 ) show that further binaural interactions take place at the
cellular level in the IC. Characterizing the time course of ipsilateral
inhibitory input relative to contralateral excitatory input is
particularly important for evaluating ideas that have been proposed
concerning the contribution of the IC to binaural processing. One idea
is that the IC is the site of suppression to a second sound presented
later and at a different spatial location from the first, the so-called
``precedence effect'' (Yin, 1994 ). A second hypothesis is that tuning
for the direction of a moving sound source depends on prolonged
ipsilateral inhibition (Moiseff, 1985 ). The fact that ipsilateral
inhibition was long lasting in the cells from which we recorded
suggests that it might indeed be involved in one or both of these
processes.
An issue that has received little attention is whether IC neurons might
receive a combination of ipsilateral and contralateral inhibition that
shapes both binaural and monaural response properties. Our results
indicate that at least some IC neurons do receive both ipsilateral and
contralateral inhibition. For example, the neuron illustrated in
Figures 6 and 12 received ipsilateral inhibition that suppressed the
contralateral response as well as contralateral inhibition at
frequencies above and below its best frequency. By directly observing
synaptic events, it will be possible in future studies to determine how
inhibition from ipsilateral and contralateral sources interact to shape
complex binaural response properties of IC neurons.
Conclusion
Tuning for specific stimulus features or patterns can be created
through convergence of excitatory and inhibitory delay lines with
different discharge patterns. As a consequence of this convergence, a
simple brief stimulus can evoke a long-lasting sequence of inhibitory
and excitatory synaptic events in IC cells. This sequence of events can
create temporal filters for simple features of sound such as duration
or direction of frequency change, and probably for more complex
patterns such rate of modulations in amplitude or frequency. It should
now be possible with the whole-cell method to measure the amplitude and
duration of synaptic events that are evoked by sensory stimuli and to
separate the effects of synaptic inputs from those of voltage-dependent
conductances.
FOOTNOTES
Received Dec. 12, 1995; revised Feb. 8, 1996; accepted Feb. 12, 1996.
This work was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation
(IBN-9210299), the National Institute on Deafness and other
Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health (DC-00287 and
DC-00607), and National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
(NS30500). We thank Joan Xie and Sotirios Keros for their help in
designing a system to digitize and display data obtained during
whole-cell patch-clamp recording. We also thank Drs. George Augustine,
William Hall, and Richard Mooney for their critical reading of this
manuscript and many helpful suggestions.
Correspondence should be addressed to Ellen Covey, Department of
Psychology, Box 351525, The University of Washington, Seattle, WA
98195-1525.
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