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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 15, 1998, 18(2):794-803
Role of Synaptic Inhibition in Processing of Dynamic Binaural
Level Stimuli
Dan H.
Sanes1, 2,
Brian
J.
Malone1, and
Malcolm N.
Semple1, 3
1 Center for Neural Science and Departments of
2 Biology and 3 Psychology, New York
University, New York, New York 10003
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ABSTRACT |
We have recently discovered a paradoxical aftereffect associated
with inhibition in the gerbil auditory midbrain. Single neurons in the
inferior colliculus (IC) were assessed for sensitivity to a virtual
motion stimulus produced by modulating the interaural level difference
(ILD), a major cue for sound localization. The class of neuron studied
was predominantly excited by contralateral stimulation and inhibited by
ipsilateral stimulation. Sound pressure level was modulated
trapezoidally at the ipsilateral "inhibitory" ear, whereas the
contralateral "excitatory" level remained constant. When the
inhibitory stimulus was decreased within a range of sound levels that
maintained suppression under static conditions, an unexpected discharge
was often elicited, apparently because of an aftereffect of synaptic
inhibition. In contrast, when the inhibitory stimulus was increased
within a range of sound levels that produced only modest suppression
under static conditions, neuronal discharge was often profoundly
suppressed. In many cases the "conditioned enhancement" or
"conditioned suppression" persisted for several seconds after the
modulation of ILD, and such conditioned responses were influenced by
the modulation depth and rate. To test the effect of inhibition in the
IC directly, glycine and GABA were pulsed from a glass recording
pipette during a constant monaural excitatory stimulus. The
acoustically elicited discharge rate was potentiated markedly if
preceded immediately by the brief (0.5-10 sec) application of
inhibitory transmitter. Collectively, these results revealed unusually
long-lasting effects of inhibition that may establish a new range of
acoustic cues to which the neuron responds best. This may have broad
implications for processing ensuing auditory stimuli.
Key words:
acoustic motion; GABA; glycine; interaural level
differences; gerbil; inferior colliculus
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INTRODUCTION |
The significant role played by
inhibition in refining the response of auditory neurons to binaural
stimuli has been demonstrated clearly by selective acoustic stimulation
of inhibitory afferents (Nelson and Erulkar, 1963 ; Rose et al., 1966 ;
Goldberg and Brown, 1969 ; Boudreau and Tsuchitani, 1970 ; Brugge et al.,
1970 ; Casseday et al., 1994 ; Mogdans and Knudsen, 1994 ), and by the
recent in vivo application of pharmacological manipulations
(Faingold et al., 1993 ; Park and Pollak, 1993a ,b , 1994 ; Le Beau et al.,
1996 ).
In the lateral superior olive (LSO), neurons are dominated by an
ipsilateral excitatory projection from the cochlear nucleus and a
contralateral glycinergic projection via the medial nucleus of the
trapezoid body (Nelson and Erulkar, 1963 ; Boudreau and Tsuchitani,
1970 ; Moore and Caspary, 1983 ; Harnischfeger et al., 1985 ; Sanes,
1990 ). This simple architecture gives rise to neurons that are strongly
influenced by interaural level differences (ILDs). As one ascends the
auditory neuraxis, these LSO-like properties are reiterated, but the
complexity of excitatory-inhibitory interactions increases.
ILD-sensitive neurons in the dorsal nucleus of the lateral lemniscus
(DNLL) receive at least two major inhibitory projections driven by the
ipsilateral ear, one direct and the other commissural (Schwartz, 1992 ;
Wu and Kelly, 1996 ). At the level of the inferior colliculus (IC),
inputs converge from multiple ascending glycinergic or GABAergic
sources, including the superior paraolivary nucleus, the LSO, the
ventral nucleus of the lateral lemniscus, and the DNLL (Adams and
Mugnaini, 1984 ; Zook and Casseday, 1987 ; Saint Marie and Baker, 1990 ;
Shneiderman et al., 1993 ; Merchan et al., 1994 ).
Although the consequence of multiple inhibitory projections to the IC
is not yet known, it has been proposed that a change in the balance of
synaptic excitation and inhibition is instrumental in generating a
special sensitivity to dynamic acoustic stimuli (Suga, 1988 ; Spitzer
and Semple, 1993 ). There is strong evidence that neurons respond
differently to binaural cues presented under static and dynamic
conditions (Yin and Kuwada, 1983 ; Reale and Brugge, 1990 ; Wagner and
Takahashi, 1990 ; Spitzer and Semple, 1991 , 1993 ; Ahissar et al., 1992 ;
Takahashi and Keller, 1992 ). For example, when a range of interaural
time differences (ITDs) is presented separately (i.e., statically), the
discharge rate of a delay-sensitive neuron varies systematically with
ITD. This ITD tuning profile typically has a clearly defined peak, or
best ITD. In contrast, a different tuning profile, with a different peak, emerges if the same range of ITD is presented as a continuous sweep (i.e., dynamically). This physiological evidence (Spitzer and
Semple, 1991 , 1993 ) coupled with a recent model of dynamic ITD coding
in the IC (Cai et al., 1997 ) suggests that synaptic inhibition is an
important factor in motion processing.
To date, evidence for the involvement of inhibition has been
indirect. One approach that could enhance our understanding of this
problem is to examine neurons in which inhibition can be manipulated
more directly. One class of IC neurons that serves this role is
predominantly excited by contralateral stimulation and inhibited by
ipsilateral stimulation (EI), and these cells are usually sensitive to
ILDs. By focusing on these neurons and generating a correlate of motion
by modulating ILD, we found that ILD-sensitive neurons also displayed a
special sensitivity to motion stimuli. A possible role for inhibitory
mechanisms within the IC was explored, not only with binaural acoustic
stimuli but also with a brief application of inhibitory transmitter
during monaural excitatory stimulation. Together, these approaches
revealed unusually long-lasting effects of inhibition that may
establish a new range of acoustic cues to which the neuron responds
best. This may have broad implications for processing ensuing auditory stimuli.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Surgical preparation. Twenty-nine adult gerbils
(Meriones unguiculatus), each with clean ears, were used in
these experiments. Animals were anesthetized with one of three
protocols: 50 mg/kg ketamine and 350 mg/kg choral hydrate
(n = 9); 50 mg/kg ketamine and 50 mg/kg pentobarbital
(n = 18); or 0.3 mg/kg Fentanyl, 10 mg/kg Fluanisone,
and 5 mg/kg Midazolam (n = 2). Supplemental anesthesia
eliminated responsiveness to nociceptive stimuli (e.g., toe pinch)
throughout the experiment. Because the effects of virtual motion
stimuli were demonstrable under all anesthetic protocols, the data were
combined. All procedures were reviewed and approved by the New York
University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. Animals
underwent tracheotomy, and standard surgical procedures were used to
expose the tympanic annuli and the dorsal surface of the brain just
rostral to the lambdoid suture.
Electrophysiology and auditory stimulation. Metal ear
probes were sealed to each annulus, and the closed acoustic system was calibrated from 100 Hz to 40 kHz (Bruel and Kjaer 0.5 inch microphone), as described previously (Spitzer and Semple, 1993 ). Acoustic stimuli were generated via digital signal-processing hardware and associated Macintosh-based software (MALab, Kaiser Instruments). Analog biological data were digitized for discrimination in time and amplitude, and all
discharge times were stored (with a resolution of 1 µsec) for
subsequent analysis.
Platinum-plated tungsten microelectrodes (Microprobe or Ainsworth, ~2
M ) were advanced (Burleigh Microdrive) ventrocaudally through the
overlying cerebral cortex toward the IC, and a single neuron was
isolated. We searched in particular for neurons that were excited
contralaterally and inhibited ipsilaterally, and this report is limited
to describing properties of these EI neurons. For each EI neuron, the
contralateral excitatory and ipsilateral inhibitory frequency ranges
were determined. Static tone pulses (200 msec tones, 700 msec trial
periods, and 10 repetitions) were then presented at the excitatory
characteristic frequency (CF) of the neuron, and spike count was
assessed as a function of monaural contralateral level and as a
function of ILD.
Dynamic level stimuli were delivered to the ipsilateral
"inhibitory" ear while a constant sound pressure level (SPL) was
maintained at the contralateral excitatory ear, resulting in a
modulation of ILD. Long duration stimuli were used to assess dynamic
effects. In one protocol, ILD was modulated trapezoidally with 1 sec
steady state components (for stimulus configuration, see Fig.
1C,D). This regimen was delivered either
repetitively for several seconds or as individual trials with a rest
interval of a few seconds between each trial. The ipsilateral sound
level was modulated at depths of ±5-40 dB and at rates of 5-120
dB/sec. The time that discharge rates remained elevated or suppressed
after a modulation was measured from 12 sec trials, and the histograms
were subjected to spline fits ( = 0.01) for comparison. For example,
the duration of an enhanced response was delimited by the time points
at which the spline fit intersected with the spline fit from control
trials.
Conjoint recording and pressure ejection. A second
procedure was used to examine the role of inhibition. Monaural
contralateral "excitatory" stimuli were delivered during local
application of inhibitory amino acids through the glass recording
pipette. These electrodes (20-50 M ) were filled with 0.4 M NaCl and 10 mM GABA plus 10 mM
glycine. Both amino acids were also delivered in isolation at 10 mM. The electrode holder pressure port was coupled to a valve (Picospritzer), permitting drug delivery (3-60 psi, 0.5-10 sec)
that could be triggered at any time during the auditory trial.
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RESULTS |
Conditioned enhancement and suppression
The principal finding was that modulation of inhibitory sound
level resulted in unexpected changes in discharge rates. In the initial
set of experiments, a neuron was first characterized in a conventional
manner using 200 msec static tone pulses. The contralateral excitatory
and ipsilateral inhibitory tuning properties are shown for one such
neuron in Figure 1A.
The range of inhibition was assessed by presenting a matrix of static
ILD combinations at CF and can be illustrated by plotting the elicited
spike count as a function of ipsilateral level for one or more fixed
contralateral levels (Fig. 1B).

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Figure 1.
Response of a single IC neuron to static and
dynamic sound stimuli. A, An excitatory response area
was obtained at a single contralateral level (30 dB SPL, black
line), and an inhibitory response area was obtained at a single
ipsilateral SPL (50 dB SPL, gray line), as described in
Materials and Methods. This neuron exhibited a characteristic
excitatory and inhibitory frequency of ~3 kHz. B,
Inhibitory rate-level functions were generated for three different
contralateral sound levels. The curves can be converted into ILD
functions by subtracting ipsilateral from contralateral sound level.
The star signifies the target binaural level attained after modulation of ipsilateral SPL. C-E, Raster and
period histograms of the neuronal response to modulated or static
ipsilateral SPL. When ipsilateral level was decreased
(C), there was a larger discharge rate at the
target SPL, compared with the condition in which ipsilateral SPL
remained constant (D). In contrast, when
ipsilateral level was increased (E), a smaller
discharge rate was elicited at the target SPL, compared with the
condition in which ipsilateral SPL remained constant
(D). The stimulus levels (dB) were
C, ipsilateral (Ipsi) = 60 30,
contralateral (Contra) = 30; D,
Ipsi = 30, Contra = 30; and
E, Ipsi = 0 30,
Contra = 30 (unit 95S027.008).
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To assess the effect of virtual acoustic motion, time-varying ILD
stimuli were generated by maintaining a constant contralateral (excitatory) level and trapezoidally modulating the ipsilateral (inhibitory) level. The ipsilateral stimulus was set initially to a
level that suppressed the contralaterally evoked discharge rate
partially or completely. Representative raster plots obtained during
modulation and control trials (five trials per stimulus condition) are
presented in Figure 1C-E, with the stimuli schematized beneath each response. The ipsilateral stimulus was increased trapezoidally or decreased to a target level of 30 dB SPL, a value that
was found to suppress discharge by ~50% when short binaural tone
pulses were used (for contralateral, 30 dB SPL; Fig. 1B, star). The modulation was repeated several times within a
trial, and discharges were sorted into the period-based response
histogram shown to the right of each set of rasters. The target SPLs
differed from neuron to neuron. The most effective target levels often corresponded to the steep portion of the ILD function.
When the ipsilateral stimulus was modulated repetitively from a
relatively high sound level (60 dB SPL), at which the binaural balance
was strongly inhibitory, to a lower target SPL (30 dB), the neuron
exhibited an enhanced discharge rate at the target, hereafter referred
to as "conditioned enhancement" (Fig. 1C). In
particular, this response was found to be enhanced when compared directly with control trials in which stimuli were delivered for the
same duration but without trapezoidal modulation (Fig.
1D). The control trials were folded on a 2.75 sec
period to match the period of modulation in the dynamic conditions. The
discharge rate remained elevated for some time after the trapezoidal
decrease in ipsilateral sound level. This and other characteristics are described in greater detail below. When ipsilateral level was modulated
repetitively from a relatively low sound level (0 dB SPL) to the same
target SPL (30 dB), the neuron exhibited a lower discharge rate than
expected, hereafter referred to as "conditioned suppression" (Fig.
1E). Once again, the conditioned suppression lasted
well beyond the modulation component.
A consistent feature of such conditioned responses to dynamic stimuli
is that they were elicited by a limited range of binaural combinations.
This point is illustrated for three different neurons in Figure
2. In the first example, the same neuron
considered in Figure 1 was exposed to a sequence of stimuli in which
the contralateral level remained constant while the ipsilateral target SPL was systematically varied (Fig. 2A). For example,
the ipsilateral level was modulated trapezoidally from 90 to 60 dB,
then 80 to 50 dB, and so forth, until a set of responses was obtained.
In Figure 2A, the response magnitude is expressed as
a function of the ipsilateral target sound level for 1 sec after the
modulation component (±30 dB). For control trials, the discharge rate
was acquired from the identical peristimulus time window (from 1.375 to
2.375 sec). The plot obtained after trapezoidal decrease of inhibitory
level shows that discharge rate was greater than expected for a
delimited range of ipsilateral target levels. In this case, an
ipsilateral modulation from 60 to 30 dB SPL produced the best conditioned enhancement. The plot obtained after trapezoidal increase of ipsilateral level shows a lower than expected discharge rate when
ipsilateral level was modulated from 0 to 30 dB SPL. Note that the plot
from control trials was similar to the ILD curve obtained with 200 msec
tone pulses (Fig. 1B).

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Figure 2.
Discharge count obtained for three different IC
neurons after modulation to several binaural target SPLs. The 1 sec
time window for analysis is shown to the right in
A. The results demonstrate that an unexpected response
was only obtained after modulation to specific binaural levels. In each
case the solid line plots the response after a decrease
of ipsilateral SPL (conditioned enhancement), the dotted
line shows the response when ipsilateral SPL was not modulated
(control trials), and the dashed line plots the response
after an increase of ipsilateral SPL (conditioned suppression).
A, This neuron displayed greatest enhancement and suppression when ipsilateral SPL was modulated to 30 dB. In contrast, increasing ipsilateral SPL to 20 dB produced no suppression, and decreasing ipsilateral SPL to 0 dB produced no enhancement. Three of
the raster and period histograms for this neuron are shown in Figure
1C-E, as denoted in the circled points
on the plot. Depth, ±30 dB. B, This neuron displayed greatest
enhancement when ipsilateral SPL was modulated to 10 dB but did not
display significant suppression for any of the stimuli tested. Depth,
±20 dB. C, This neuron displayed greatest suppression
when ipsilateral SPL was modulated to 30 or 40 dB but did not display
enhancement for any of the stimuli tested. Depth, ±30 dB.
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A summary plot for a neuron that exhibited conditioned
enhancement but not conditioned suppression is shown in Figure
2B. In contrast, a neuron that displayed conditioned
suppression but not conditioned enhancement is shown in Figure
2C. Approximately 65% of the single EI neurons that were
tested (n = 63 of 97) displayed conditioned
enhancement, and ~80% displayed conditioned suppression (n = 41 of 51; fewer neurons were tested with
increasing ipsilateral level). A failure to display conditioned
enhancement in response to virtual motion stimuli was commonly
associated with a rapid adaptation of the contralaterally evoked
response.
Kinetics of response
Dynamic conditioning of responses to ILD stimuli was not
restricted to the time during which sound level changed. Rather, the
enhanced or suppressed discharge rates often outlasted the dynamic
component by several seconds. To evaluate the recovery kinetics after
modulation of the ipsilateral level, the discharge pattern was
monitored for 10 sec. Figure 3
illustrates the response of three EI neurons when the ipsilateral level
decreased (left), remained constant (middle), and
increased (right). For comparative purposes, the response
histogram to constant ipsilateral level (control trial) is superimposed
in gray on each modulation histogram. In each case,
decreasing ipsilateral level produced a response that remained higher
than the control histogram for several seconds. Likewise, increasing
ipsilateral level produced a response that remained lower than the
control histogram for several seconds. The mean duration of conditioned
enhancement was 5.5 ± 0.8 sec (n = 19), and the
mean duration of conditioned suppression was 5.3 ± 0.9 sec
(n = 14).

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Figure 3.
Time course of conditioned enhancement or
suppression after acoustic motion stimuli is shown for three IC
neurons. Effects for each neuron are shown under three conditions: when
ipsilateral SPL is decreasing (left), constant
(center), and increasing (right). Each
neuron exhibited a long-lasting enhanced (left) or
suppressed (right) response after the virtual motion
component, compared with the response to an unmodulated control
stimulus (middle). The control response is superimposed
as light gray bars for comparison. The frequency and
sound levels used were A, ipsilateral
(Ipsi) = 40 20/contralateral (Contra) = 30, Ipsi = 20/Contra = 30, Ipsi = 0 20/Contra = 30, CF = 4.5 kHz; B, Ipsi = 70 40/Contra = 10, Ipsi = 40/Contra = 10, Ipsi = 10 40/Contra = 10, CF = 8 kHz; and C, Ipsi = 70 50/Contra = 10, Ipsi = 50/Contra = 10, Ipsi = 30 50/Contra = 10, CF = 21 kHz.
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Depth of modulation
Most neurons were tested with ipsilateral stimuli the level of
which changed by ±20 or 30 dB. To characterize the influence of
modulation depth in more detail, several neurons were tested with
depths ranging from +40 to 40 dB, while keeping the ipsilateral target level and modulation rate constant. Figure
4 shows the discharge rate of three EI
neurons as a function of the depth of modulation. Negative values
designate a decrease in ipsilateral level, and positive values
designate an increase in ipsilateral level. The maximum conditioned
enhancement was usually observed for depths of 10 and 20 dB. In a
few neurons, a depth of 5 dB was sufficient to produce conditioned
enhancement (data not shown), suggesting that the coding properties
described herein may be relevant to the dynamic ILD changes that would
occur across the small head of a rodent. For the cases shown in Figure
4, the parameters were optimized to illustrate conditioned enhancement (i.e., the ipsilateral target level was chosen to produce relatively strong inhibition and low discharge rate, at a depth of 0). Thus, conditioned suppression is not illustrated. When ipsilateral level was
adjusted to produce relatively weak inhibition at a depth of 0 dB, then
the maximum conditioned suppression was usually observed for depths of
+10 and +20 dB (data not shown).

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Figure 4.
The effect of modulation depth on conditioned
enhancement is shown for three IC neurons. In each case, discharge
magnitude increased when ipsilateral level was modulated by 10 dB,
and the response was maximal at a depth of 20 to 30 dB. When depth equals 0, there is no ipsilateral modulation.
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Rate of modulation
Most neurons were tested with a modulation rate of 80 dB/sec. At this rate, our most commonly used modulation depths of 20 and 30 dB required modulation times of 125 and 375 msec, respectively. In subsequent experiments modulation rate was varied to determine, in
particular, whether conditioned enhancement could be observed for very
slow virtual motion stimuli. As shown in Figure
5, some neurons exhibited an enhanced
response to downward modulation of the inhibitory stimulus for rates as
low as 5 dB/sec (e.g., a 6 sec modulation duration at a depth of 30
dB). Conditioned enhancement reached a greater maximum response at more
rapid rates of modulation, becoming best at ~30-60 dB/second.

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Figure 5.
The influence of modulation rate on conditioned
enhancement. The response of two IC neurons is shown for modulation
rates from 5 to 120 dB/sec. The control response obtained with constant binaural SPL is shown for each histogram (gray
bars). The modulation period during which ipsilateral amplitude
is decreasing is shown by the schematic above the histograms. The first
neuron (top) exhibited significant enhancement even at
the slowest rate of modulation, 5 dB/sec. The first bar of the control
histogram was removed for clarity. The second neuron
(bottom) displayed significant enhancement at a rate of
10 dB/sec.
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Experimental isolation of ipsilateral inhibition
Our typical stimulus paradigm activated both contralateral and
ipsilateral afferents, and changes in either pathway could have
contributed to the effect. To examine independently the role of
inhibition, exclusively ipsilateral stimuli were presented to some
spontaneously active EI neurons. As shown in Figure
6, ipsilateral stimuli decreased
spontaneous discharge, as expected, during the first second of
stimulation. When the inhibitory sound level was modulated down, there
was a significant enhancement in the neurons discharge rate, relative
to the normal spontaneous discharge level (gray
histogram). Thus, conditioned enhancement did not necessarily
require the use-dependent modulation of contralateral excitatory
synapses.

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Figure 6.
When IC neurons were firing spontaneously, it was
possible to test the effect of ipsilateral stimulation alone. In both
neurons shown, the spontaneous discharge level was enhanced
dramatically by decreasing sound level at the ipsilateral ear.
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Experimental isolation of contralateral excitation
The above observations indicated that the conditioned enhancement
consequent to virtual motion stimulation could be mediated by
ipsilaterally evoked inhibition. Confounding this interpretation, stimulation of the ipsilateral ear recruits inhibitory and excitatory synapses at several loci in the auditory brain stem. Any or all of
these synapses might be contributing to conditioned enhancement. As a
first step toward clarifying this circuit, we focused on inhibition
within the IC. Using a glass recording pipette (see Materials and
Methods), we first identified a neuron that displayed conditioned
enhancement in response to a virtual motion stimulus (Fig.
7A). Single-unit recordings
were maintained while the contralateral acoustic stimulus was paired
with short pressure pulses of GABA-glycine delivered from the same
pipette in lieu of the ipsilateral acoustic stimulus. The pipette
characteristics were designed to ensure that single-neuron recordings
were comparable to those obtained with metal electrodes, and that the
fluid volume ejected did not perturb the quality of recording (Fig.
7B). When a 5 sec pulse of GABA-glycine was applied to the
neuron during contralateral stimulation, discharge was blocked but
resumed almost immediately at the pulse offset (Fig. 7B),
presumably because of active reuptake. As illustrated in Figure
7C, the neuron displayed a significant increase in the
contralaterally evoked discharge immediately after the GABA-glycine
pulse was terminated. By comparison, a much lower discharge rate was
elicited by the contralateral stimulus immediately before drug was
ejected. Thus, local inhibition of the IC neuron by GABA-glycine was
an effective substitute for ipsilateral ear stimulation.

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Figure 7.
Enhanced discharge may be elicited by exposure to
an indirect (acoustic) or direct (pharmacological) inhibitory
conditioning stimulus. A, Compared with the control run
(gray bars), in which a steady-state binaural
stimulus was delivered, the neuron displayed an enhanced response after
a virtual motion stimulus (open bars), 5 sec after
stimulus onset. (SPL values are shown on stimulus bars.)
B, The same neuron was tested with a pulse of
GABA-glycine from the recording pipette. The oscilloscope trace
reveals that suppression of the contralaterally evoked response was
complete during the drug delivery, and that the quality of the recording did not suffer during drug ejection.
C, Several GABA-glycine trials accumulated by
delivering the GABA-glycine at a discrete latency to the onset of the
contralateral excitatory stimulus (E = 50 dB SPL).
The neuron displayed a dramatically enhanced response at the offset of
the drug pulse, consistent with its acoustically evoked properties
(unit 96B017.006).
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Many IC neurons were not clearly inhibited by ipsilateral sound
stimulation and were thus excluded from the binaural portion of this
study. Nevertheless, several of these neurons did exhibit acoustically
evoked inhibition. For example, discharge rate was a nonmonotonic
function of contralateral stimulus level in many neurons. Therefore,
the effects of GABA-glycine application were assessed in conjunction
with several types of contralateral stimuli. As shown in Figure
8A, the contralaterally
evoked discharge of one neuron first increased and then decreased
during a 20 sec tonal stimulus (gray bars).
Nevertheless, it was possible to enhance the excitatory response when a
pulse of GABA-glycine was delivered 10 sec after the onset of the 20 sec tone (open bars). When a 1 sec pulse of GABA-glycine
was delivered during the presentation of a train of auditory clicks, an
enhanced click-evoked response was apparent at the drug offset (Fig.
8B). Of 57 neurons that were inhibited by
GABA-glycine pulses, 35 (61%) exhibited an enhanced discharge rate at
the termination of the drug delivery. Of 19 neurons to which either
GABA or glycine was applied, 15 (79%) exhibited an enhanced discharge
rate. GABA-glycine application in the absence of excitatory synaptic
drive did not produce an enhanced discharge rate.

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Figure 8.
Conditioned enhancement from pharmacological
inhibition was present in a wide range of IC neurons. A,
When stimulated with a contralateral tone (60 dB SPL) for 20 sec, an IC
neuron displayed a vigorous response (gray bars).
When a GABA-glycine pulse was delivered after 10 sec, discharge was
blocked transiently but returned to greater than control values at the
pulse offset (open bars) (unit 96B028.003).
B, When stimulated with contralateral clicks at 50 Hz, a
different neuron displayed a decreasing response, but when a 2 sec
pulse of GABA-glycine was delivered (left), the response reappeared at the pulse offset. C, The
GABA-glycine pulse was delivered later in the trial during a second
run (right) (unit 96B027.003).
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DISCUSSION |
Electrophysiological studies of sound localization mechanisms have
considered the role of inhibition during relatively short stimuli
(typically no more than 100 msec), usually consisting of steady-state
level or phase differences between the two ears. Under these conditions
the responses of many neurons in the central auditory pathway are tuned
to ITD or ILD (Rose et al., 1966 ; Goldberg and Brown, 1969 ; Brugge et
al., 1969 ; Boudreau and Tsuchitani, 1970 ; Brugge and Merzenich, 1973 ).
The present study has revealed that dynamic ILD stimuli elicit
responses that are not predicted on the basis of the response to static
binaural stimuli. For many IC neurons, the response to a given ILD
stimulus was enhanced if that stimulus was immediately preceded by a
dynamic reduction in level at the ipsilateral inhibitory ear (i.e., a
dynamic ILD). This was termed conditioned enhancement. When acoustic
stimulation of the ipsilateral inhibitory ear was increased suddenly,
many IC neurons displayed a smaller than expected response at the new binaural stimulus, termed conditioned suppression.
Similar responses have been reported previously for a variety of
virtual acoustic motion stimuli (Sovijärvi and Hyvärinen, 1974 ; Yin and Kuwada, 1983 ; Wagner and Takahashi, 1990 ; Spitzer and
Semple, 1991 , 1993 ; Ahissar et al., 1992 ; Stumpf et al., 1992 ; Takahashi and Keller, 1992 ; Toronchuk et al., 1992 ). In the barn owl,
midbrain neurons respond selectively to the direction of virtual motion
stimuli, although the absolute discharge rates seldom exceeded the
response to static stimulation, perhaps because of the transient nature
of the excitatory stimulus or the presence of inhibitory sidebands
(Wagner and Takahashi, 1992 ). Neuronal responses to the unfavorable
direction of motion did suppress discharge rates below the static
response, similar to conditioned suppression in the gerbil IC. In the
auditory cortex, moving stimuli can produce either enhanced or
suppressed discharge rates in some neurons, compared with stimuli from
a static sound source (Ahissar et al., 1992 ).
The present results suggest that the conditioning of responses by
dynamic stimulation depends on several stimulus parameters, including
the depth, rate, exposure period, and target level of the stimulus.
When the stimulus parameters are optimized, the dynamically conditioned
responses are often found to last for several seconds after the virtual
motion component of the stimulus. Both the acoustic and pharmacological
experiments suggest that an aftereffect of synaptic inhibition
transiently enhances or suppresses the gain of excitatory afferents in
the IC. The following discussion considers the stimulus parameters
necessary to observe these phenomena, possible underlying cellular
mechanisms, and the possible relevance to processing of dynamic
stimuli, such as acoustic motion.
Acoustic parameters that condition neural responses
Conditioned enhancement and suppression were observed under
several stimulus conditions in this study. The first requirement was
stability of the contralaterally evoked response over seconds of
stimulation. Despite clear evidence of ILD sensitivity shaped by
ipsilateral inhibition in response to 200 msec binaural stimuli, several neurons failed to respond to dynamic stimuli. One prominent reason for this failure was a negligible response to constant monaural
stimulation of the contralateral excitatory ear after >1 sec of
stimulation. Therefore, it remains possible that these nonresponding
neurons might have displayed sensitivity to virtual motion stimuli if
the contralateral stimulus had been optimized. Although long-duration
auditory stimuli are rarely used, a complete cessation of the
sound-driven response is almost certainly a CNS mechanism. Recordings
from single cat auditory nerve fibers during discontinuous tonal
stimuli of 32 sec duration demonstrate prominent adaptation but not
cessation of activity (Javel, 1996 ). Habituation along the ipsilateral
pathway may also preclude a response to dynamic stimulation, but
examination of this possibility will require analysis of inhibitory
synaptic currents (Covey et al., 1996 ). At this juncture, it might
reasonably be asked whether the anesthetic schedule concealed or
precipitated the conditioning influence of responses to virtual motion
stimuli. Although full resolution must await replication in an
unanesthetized preparation, conditioned enhancement and suppression
were observed under three different anesthetic schedules in the present
study, including a nonbarbiturate protocol (see Materials and
Methods).
For neurons that fulfilled these minimum response criteria, it was
found that the unexpectedly high or low discharge rates were limited to
a narrow range of virtual motion stimuli. Figure 2 illustrates this
point by comparing the response elicited by a particular binaural level
combination under three conditions: immediately after (1) an
increasing, (2) a decreasing, or (3) a constant (control) ipsilateral
stimulus level. In all cases, the contralateral level remained constant
throughout. If a neuronal response to these binaural level stimuli
maintained a consistent relation to the ILD, with no particular
dependence on the recent history of stimulation, these curves should be
identical. To the extent that the initial steady-state binaural
component and the virtual motion component affect subsequent responses,
these three curves diverge. For 65% of EI neurons tested, decrease of
ipsilateral level led to a larger than expected discharge rate in the
succeeding 1 sec interval. This effect typically was limited to a
specific range of ipsilateral levels for a given contralateral level,
usually those that fell between the middle and tail of the ILD function (Figs. 1, 2). An analogous finding has been made for low CF neurons in
the inferior colliculus of gerbils and cats using a dynamic interaural
phase delay stimulus (Semple and Spitzer, 1991, 1993). Modulation of
interaural phase near the edge of static ITD functions was most
effective at producing unexpectedly large or small responses. Presumably these sensitive portions of the ILD and ITD static tuning
curves are associated with overlapping excitatory and inhibitory influences.
Variation of two stimulus parameters, the rate of ipsilateral
modulation and the depth of ipsilateral modulation, was found to affect
the amplitude of conditioned enhancement. In general, modulation of
ipsilateral level by ±10-20 dB produced the largest changes in
discharge rate, and the response seemed saturated by 30 dB (Fig. 4).
This finding suggests that the magnitude of the dynamic conditioning
effect was proportional to the magnitude of synaptic inhibition.
Conditioned enhancement was also found to rely on modulation rate.
Periods of very slow modulation lasting up to 6 sec (e.g., depth of
30 dB at 5 dB/sec) were sufficient to produce an enhanced discharge
rate compared with control trials (Fig. 5). However, more rapid
modulation generally elicited greater maximum discharge rates. The most
effective modulation period was typically ~0.5 sec (e.g., depth of
30 dB at 60 dB/sec).
Possible cellular mechanisms
In the central auditory system, the influence of
inhibitory afferents in shaping the frequency, intensity, or temporal
selectivity of a neuron has been well described (Greenwood and
Maruyama, 1965 ; Rose et al., 1966 ; Fujita and Konishi, 1991 ). Three
lines of evidence suggest that conditioned enhancement in the IC is at
least partially attributable to a postsynaptic mechanism. First,
contralaterally evoked synaptic activity is not required. Modulation of
the ipsilateral pathway alone is sufficient to increase spontaneous
discharge rates in some IC neurons (Fig. 6). Although this does not
imply that the excitatory afferents are irrelevant to the magnitude of
response, it does demonstrate the primacy of synaptic inhibition.
Second, the contralaterally evoked discharge rate can be enhanced
without actually using the presynaptic inhibitory terminals. When
GABA-glycine were administered from the recording electrode, the
contralaterally evoked discharge rate was enhanced immediately after
the brief (0.5-10 sec) drug exposure (Figs. 7, 8). The effect of
inhibitory transmitter was also observed for individual application of
GABA or glycine, and ~60% of neurons that were inhibited during drug
delivery also exhibited enhanced discharge at the offset of delivery.
This experiment demonstrates that the electrical properties of the IC
neuron can be modified transiently by GABAergic or glycinergic
inhibition.
Third, conditioned enhancement does not appear to result from
inhibitory fatigue. If the inhibitory afferents became weaker with
continued use, then one would predict that the discharge rate would
increase gradually even during the more intense phase of inhibitory
stimulation. The opposite was true (Fig. 1C); as ipsilateral
sound level was continuously modulated, the suppression of spontaneous
activity remained prominent during the interval when level was greatest
(e.g., when ipsilateral level was 60 dB in Fig. 1C and 30 dB
in Fig. 1E). Therefore, we hypothesize that synaptic
inhibition may induce a change in the postsynaptic neuron that is
secondary to hyperpolarization. This hypothesis may be tested in future
experiments with GABA-glycine receptor antagonists in vivo
or with direct perturbation of membrane potential in the IC brain slice
preparation (Lo et al., 1998 ).
The prolonged time course of conditioned enhancement (Fig. 3)
distinguishes it from the well-described cellular property, anode break
excitation, that constitutes a momentary decrease in sodium channel
inactivation (Hodgkin and Huxley, 1952 ). One possible cellular
mechanism in IC neurons could involve a membrane hyperpolarization of
sufficient magnitude and duration to activate an inward current,
resulting in long-lasting membrane depolarization. Currents of this
sort have been identified in cardiac muscle, photoreceptors, spinal
ganglia, and sensorimotor cortex (Yanagihara and Irisawa, 1980 ; Mayer
and Westbrook, 1983 ; Bader and Bertrand, 1984 ; Spain et al., 1987 ). It
also remains possible that GABAA receptors mediate an
unexpected synaptic response in the IC. For example, we found recently
that muscimol produced a transient hyperpolarization, followed by a
longer-lasting depolarization in IC neurons in vitro, and
this was accompanied by a rise in intracellular free calcium (Lo et
al., 1998 ). Finally, it is conceivable that the continuous (i.e., 1-2
sec) presence of inhibitory transmitter could desensitize the
postsynaptic receptors or activate inhibitory autoreceptors, either of
which might decrease net inhibitory strength. This mechanism could only
explain our results if contralateral stimuli also recruited inhibitory
transmission, down-regulation of which would produce an increase in
contralaterally evoked discharge.
Functional significance
In this study we have applied a dynamic acoustic stimulus that is
based on modulation of a binaural cue for sound localization, and
consequently much of our discussion is phrased in terms of virtual
acoustic motion. Nevertheless, it is important to consider the more
general implication that time-varying ITD and ILD stimuli might be two
instances of a general class of dynamic stimuli that have the potential
to condition the responsiveness of central auditory neurons. In this
context, the common characteristic may be the interplay between
excitatory and inhibitory synaptic influences, including modifications
of synaptic strength that may occur during the course of
stimulation.
Although previous reports have not tested the delayed effects of
inhibitory transmission on excitatory gain directly, there are many
findings that might be explained by this mechanism. For example,
several groups have demonstrated that discharge rate is enhanced by
time-varying acoustic signals, possibly because of modulation of
inhibitory synaptic drive (Spitzer and Semple, 1991 , 1993 ; Ahissar et
al., 1992 ; Takahashi and Keller, 1992 ). For example, the discharge
rates of primate auditory cortex neurons were most enhanced by moving
stimuli that entered the contralateral field, presumably leaving a
region of inhibition (see Ahissar et al., 1992 , their Fig. 3). In the
auditory cortex, selective recruitment of inhibitory afferents within a
delimited frequency band has also been shown to produce conditioned
enhancement (Phillips and Hall, 1992 ).
Conditioned enhancement may also help explain computational properties
in other regions that have previously been ascribed to sensory
adaptation. For example, the response-contrast curves of visual
cortical neurons shift laterally along the contrast axis after
preexposure at a specific contrast level, thus providing a mechanism
for gain control (Ohzawa et al., 1985 ). At the synaptic level,
conditioned enhancement may provide a mechanism for adjusting the gain
of excitatory afferents, particularly during the course of prolonged
acoustic stimuli.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Aug. 11, 1997; revised Oct. 27, 1997; accepted Nov. 3, 1997.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant DC00540
to D.H.S., National Institutes of Health Grant DC01767 to M.N.S., and
the W. M. Keck Foundation (M.N.S.). We thank Sally Thornton, Lisa
Wise, Suresh Krishna, and Scott Moulder for comments on this
manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dan H. Sanes, Center for Neural
Science, 4 Washington Place, New York University, New York, NY 10003.
 |
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