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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 1, 2001, 21(13):4830-4843
Reversible Inactivation of the Dorsal Nucleus of the Lateral
Lemniscus Reveals Its Role in the Processing of Multiple Sound Sources
in the Inferior Colliculus of Bats
R. Michael
Burger and
George D.
Pollak
Section of Neurobiology, University of Texas, Austin, Texas 78712
 |
ABSTRACT |
Neurons in the inferior colliculus (IC) that are excited by one ear
and inhibited by the other [excitatory
inhibitory (EI) neurons] can
code interaural intensity disparities (IIDs), the cues animals use to
localize high frequencies. Although EI properties are first formed in a
lower nucleus and imposed on some IC cells via an excitatory
projection, many other EI neurons are formed de novo in
the IC. By reversibly inactivating the dorsal nucleus of the lateral
lemniscus (DNLL) in Mexican free-tailed bats with kynurenic acid, we
show that the EI properties of many IC cells are formed de
novo via an inhibitory projection from the DNLL on the opposite
side. We also show that signals excitatory to the IC evoke an
inhibition in the opposite DNLL that persists for tens of milliseconds
after the signal has ended. During that period, strongly suppressed EI
cells in the IC are deprived of inhibition from the DNLL and respond to
binaural signals as weakly inhibited or monaural cells. By relieving
inhibition at the IC, we show that an initial binaural signal
essentially reconfigures the circuit and thereby allows IC cells to
respond to trailing binaural signals that were inhibitory when
presented alone. Thus, DNLL innervation creates a property in the IC
that is not possessed by lower neurons or by collicular EI neurons that
are not innervated by the DNLL. That property is a change in
responsiveness to binaural signals, a change dependent on the reception
of an earlier sound. These features suggest that the circuitry linking
the DNLL with the opposite central nucleus of the IC is
important for the processing of IIDs that change over time, such as the
IIDs generated by moving stimuli or by multiple sound sources that
emanate from different regions of space.
Key words:
GABA; persistent inhibition; precedence effect; inferior
colliculus; sound localization; dorsal nucleus of lateral lemniscus
 |
INTRODUCTION |
The projections from the vast
majority of lower auditory nuclei converge at a common destination in
the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICc) (for review,
see Aitkin, 1986
; Oliver and Huerta, 1992
). This large
convergence of inputs suggests that substantial transformations occur
in the ICc; yet the response properties of ICc neurons appear to be
similar to those of the lower nuclei from which they receive their
innervation. An example is excitatory-inhibitory (EI) neurons in the
ICc, neurons that are excited by one ear and inhibited by the other
ear. These neurons are sensitive to interaural intensity disparities
(IIDs), the cues animals use to localize high-frequency sounds
(Erulkar, 1972
; Mills, 1972
). EI neurons are initially formed in the
lateral superior olive (LSO) (Boudreau and Tsuchitani, 1968
; Finlayson
and Caspary, 1991
). They are also the dominant type in the dorsal
nucleus of the lateral lemniscus (DNLL), a nucleus the neurons of which
are almost exclusively GABAergic (Brugge et al., 1970
; Adams and
Mugniani, 1984
; Covey, 1993
; Yang and Pollak, 1994a
,b
,c
; Winer et al.,
1995
). The DNLL, like the ICc, is one of the principal targets of both the ipsilateral and contralateral LSOs (Glendenning et al., 1981
; Ross
et al., 1988
; Shneiderman et al., 1988
, 1999
; Yang et al., 1996
). The
DNLL, in turn, sends strong GABAergic projections bilaterally to the
ICc (Ross et al., 1988
; Shneiderman et al., 1988
, 1999
; Gonzalez-Hernandez et al., 1996
; Kelly et al., 1998
). Thus, EI cells of
the ICc are strongly innervated by both LSOs and DNLLs, the lower
nuclei the neuronal populations of which are EI (Fig. 1A).

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Figure 1.
Schematic diagrams showing some principal
connections from lower nuclei to EI neurons in the ICc
(A) and the various ways that EI properties can
be formed by subsets of those projections (B-D).
A, The DNLL, shown in black, is a
purely GABAergic nucleus that provides strong inhibitory projections to
both the ipsilateral and contralateral ICc. Excitatory projections are
shown as solid lines, and inhibitory projections are
dashed lines. B, Excitatory projections
from LSO to the contralateral ICc are shown. It is via this pathway
that the excitatory-inhibitory properties first formed in the LSO can
be imposed on their targets in the ICc. C, This circuit
shows how EI properties can be formed de novo in the
ICc. Stimulation of the ear contralateral to the ICc drives a lower
monaural nucleus, shown generically here as the cochlear nucleus, which
provides the excitation to the ICc. Stimulation of the ear ipsilateral
to the ICc excites the DNLL, which then provides the inhibition that
suppresses the contralaterally evoked excitation in the ICc.
D, This circuit shows how EI properties, first formed in
the LSO, can be modified in the ICc via the convergence of LSO and DNLL
projections. The net effect of this convergence is to create EI cells
in the ICc that are suppressed by lower intensities at the ipsilateral
ear than they would be if they received only the LSO projection.
excit, Excitatory; inhib, inhibitory;
MNTB, medial nucleus of the trapezoid body.
|
|
The projections from the contralateral LSO to both the DNLL and ICc are
excitatory, and it is via these crossed projections that the EI
properties of the LSO are imposed on the DNLL and ICc (Fig.
1B,C) (Saint Marie et al., 1989
; Saint Marie and
Baker, 1990
; Glendenning et al., 1992
; Park and Pollak, 1993
, 1994
). However, studies over the past several years have shown that although the EI properties of some ICc neurons are derived from innervation by
the LSO, the EI properties of many ICc cells are either modified substantially or even formed de novo in the ICc (Faingold et
al., 1991
; Li and Kelly, 1992
; Vater et al., 1992
; Faingold et al., 1993
; Park and Pollak, 1993
, 1994
). In this regard, the GABAergic projections from the DNLL to the opposite ICc play critical roles (Fig.
1C,D).
What is unclear is what functional dividend derives from modifying or
forming EI properties de novo in the ICc, because EI cells
are already formed in the LSO. One hypothesis proposes that the
reception of a first signal reconfigures the circuit by functionally inactivating the DNLL for a period of time. During that period, EI
cells in the IC are deprived of their inhibitory inputs from the DNLL
and are temporarily transformed from strongly inhibited into weakly
inhibited EI or even monaural cells (Yang and Pollak, 1994c
; Pollak,
1997
). In short, there would be a change in the responsiveness of ICc
cells to binaural signals, a change dependent on the reception of an
earlier sound that inactivates the DNLL. Thus, at least one consequence
of DNLL projections to the ICc is to influence the processing of
multiple sound sources that originate from different regions of space.
Here we provide evidence supporting this hypothesis with recordings
from the auditory system of Mexican free-tailed bats, where we block
GABAergic inhibition at the DNLL and ICc as well as reversibly
inactivate the DNLL while recording from ICc neurons. We then discuss
the functional relevance of these features for sound localization and
suggest that DNLL inhibition of the ICc may be one of the neural
mechanisms that underlie the precedence effect.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Surgical procedure. Mexican free-tailed bats,
Tadarida brasilensis mexicana, were used in this study. We
used these animals because their brainstem auditory nuclei are
fundamentally similar to those of less specialized mammals, but they
are greatly hypertrophied (Grothe et al., 1994
; Park et al., 1996
;
Grothe and Park, 1998
). The relatively large size makes nuclei, such as
the IC, readily accessible, whereas the small absolute size allows them
to be reversibly inactivated by iontophoresing drugs.
Each animal was anesthetized with methoxyflurane inhalation (Metofane;
Pitman-Moore, Inc.) and the neuroleptic Innovar-Vet (Fentanyl and
Droperidol; 0.02 mg/gm of body weight; Pitman-Moore, Inc.), injected
intraperitoneally. The hair on the head was removed with a depilatory,
and the head was secured in a head holder with a bite bar. The muscles
and skin overlying the skull were reflected, and lidocaine
(Elkins-Sinn, Cherry Hill, NJ) was applied topically to all open
wounds. The surface of the skull was cleared of tissue, and a
foundation layer of cyanoacrylate and small glass beads was placed on
the surface. The IC is greatly hypertrophied and is so large that it
protrudes between the cortex and the cerebellum. Both ICs are clearly
visible through the thin braincase as two prominent structures framed
by suture lines. By the use of visible landmarks formed by the ICs and
the suture lines, a small opening in the skull was made over the left
IC with a scalpel blade. In experiments in which we recorded from the
DNLL, a small opening was made over the right IC, and in experiments in
which we inactivated the DNLL while recording from the ICc, small
openings were made over each IC.
The bat was then transferred to a heated recording chamber, where it
was placed in a restraining cushion constructed of foam molded to the
animal's body. The restraining cushion was attached to a platform
mounted on a custom-made stereotaxic instrument (Schuller et al.,
1986
). A small metal rod was cemented to the foundation layer on the
skull and then attached to a bar mounted on the stereotaxic instrument
to ensure a uniform positioning of the head. A ground electrode was
placed between the reflected muscle and the skin. Recordings were begun
after the bats recovered from the anesthetic. The bats typically lie
quietly in the restraining cushion and show no signs of pain or
discomfort. Supplementary doses of the neuroleptic were given if the
bat struggled or otherwise appeared in discomfort.
After the animal was fixed in the stereotaxic instrument, the
electrode was positioned over the right IC while being viewed with an
operating microscope. The electrode was advanced to a depth of 300 µm
to ensure that recordings were obtained from neurons in the central
nucleus of the inferior colliculus. The electrode was subsequently
advanced from outside of the experimental chamber with a piezoelectric
microdrive (Burleigh 7121W). For recordings from the DNLL, the
instrument in which the bat was held was first rotated and adjusted to
maximize the extent of the DNLL that would be encountered by the
electrode penetration. By the use of visual landmarks, the electrode
was then positioned on the surface of the IC so that it would enter the
DNLL at a depth of ~1600 µm. As with ICc recordings, the electrode
was subsequently advanced from outside of the experimental chamber with
a piezoelectric microdrive.
Several criteria were used to determine when the electrode had left the
ICc and entered the DNLL. As the electrode was advanced through the
ICc, there was an abrupt change in the best frequency (BF, the
frequency to which the cluster or single unit was most sensitive) of
the background activity at a depth of ~1600 µm. This change
signaled that the electrode had left the ICc and entered the DNLL. For
the next 200-300 µm, both the multiunit activity and single units
encountered displayed prominent sustained activity in response to
contralateral tone bursts, and this activity was strongly suppressed
when tone bursts were presented simultaneously to the ipsilateral
(inhibitory) ear. A second abrupt change in BF and a change from
binaural activity to monaural activity that was influenced only by
sound to the contralateral ear signaled when the electrode left the
DNLL and entered the intermediate nucleus of the lateral lemniscus. To
ensure that these changes in BF, as well as discharge patterns and
binaural properties, indicate DNLL location, in 16 experiments
electrode location was verified with small iontophoretic injections
(2-5 nA for 20-60 sec) of rhodamine-conjugated dextran (Molecular
Probes, Eugene, OR). These response features have proven to be reliable
indicators in previous studies of the mustache bat's DNLL (Markovitz
and Pollak, 1993
, 1994
; Yang and Pollak, 1994a
,b
,c
).
Electrodes. Both single-barrel glass pipettes filled with 1 M NaCl and 2% fast green, pH 7.4, and "piggy back"
multibarrel micropipettes (Havey and Caspary, 1980
) were used. Fast
green was used to enhance the visibility of the electrode. The
recording electrodes, used either singly or when mounted on multibarrel electrodes, were constructed from capillary glass that was pulled and
blunted to a tip diameter of 1-2 µm under microscopic observation. Multibarrel electrodes were pulled from a five-barrel blank (A-M Systems) and blunted to 15-20 µm. A single-barrel pipette was then
attached to the five-barrel pipette and glued with cyanoacrylate so
that the tip of the single-barrel pipette protruded 10-15 µm from
the blunted tip of the five-barrel pipette. The single-barrel micropipette was used for recording single-unit activity and was filled
with buffered 1 M NaCl and 2% fast green, pH 7.4. One
barrel of the five-barrel pipette was the balancing barrel and was
filled with buffered 1 M NaCl and 2% fast green. The other
barrels were filled with various substances that depended on the
experiment. With ICc recordings, two to four barrels were filled with
solutions of bicuculline methiodide (10 mM in 0.165 M NaCl, pH 3.0; Sigma, St. Louis, MO), an antagonist of
GABAA receptors (Borman, 1988
), and in
some experiments one barrel was also filled with glutamic and aspartic
acid (500 mM each in dH2O, pH 9-10).
When recording from the DNLL, two barrels were filled with a cocktail
of bicuculline methiodide and the glycine receptor antagonist
strychnine HCl (Cooper et al., 1982
) (both were 10 mM in
0.165 M NaCl, pH 3.0; Sigma). The two other barrels were
filled with glutamic and aspartic acid (500 mM each in
dH2O, pH 9-10). As explained in Results, because
neither ICc nor DNLL cells were spontaneously active, glutamic and
aspartic acid were used to generate background activity against which
inhibition evoked by stimulation of the ipsilateral ear could be
observed. For DNLL inactivation experiments, all drug barrels were
filled with a solution of kynurenic acid (75 mM in 0.165 M NaCl, pH 9-10; Sigma), a broad-spectrum antagonist of
glutamatergic receptors (Collingridge and Lester, 1989
). Drugs were
retained in the electrode with a 15-20 nA current of opposite polarity. The drug and balancing barrels were connected via
silver-silver chloride wires to a six-channel microiontophoresis
constant-current generator (Medical Systems Neurophore BH-2) that was
used to generate and monitor ejection and retention currents. The sum
channel was used to balance current in the drug barrels and reduce
current effects. The recording barrel was connected by a silver-silver chloride wire to a Dagan AC amplifier (model 2400).
Acoustic stimuli and data acquisition. Sine waves from a
Wavetek function generator (model 136) were shaped into tone bursts with a custom-made analog switch. Tone burst frequency was monitored by
a frequency counter. Tone bursts, as well as frequency-modulated (FM)
sweeps, were also generated digitally by a Power Macintosh 7300. FM
sweeps were always digitally generated and could have any desired
duration as well as starting and terminal frequency. All stimuli,
whether generated digitally or by the function generator, had 0.2 msec
rise and fall times and were presented four times per second. The
computer could generate either one or two signals (tone bursts or FM
sweeps), with interpulse intervals selected by the investigator. The
interpulse interval will be referred to simply as the "interval"
and indicates the time from the end of the first signal to the
beginning of the second or trailing signal. In addition, each signal
could be presented either monaurally or binaurally. A Power Macintosh
7300 computer was used to control stimulus parameters via connections
to a real time clock and a pair of digital attenuators (Wilsonics,
model PATT) through a 24-bit digital interface NuBus card (National
Instruments DIO-24) and a custom-made digital distributor. The output
of each independently controlled channel of the attenuator was sent to
two 1/4 inch Brüel and Kjaer (B&K) microphones biased with 200 V
of DC and driven as speakers. The frequency response of each speaker
was measured with another B&K microphone, the output of which was fed
to a sound-level meter (B&K, model 2608) that measured sound pressure
level in decibels (0.0002 dynes/cm2). At
the start of each experiment, speakers, with the protective grid
attached, were inserted into the funnels formed by the bat's pinnas and were positioned adjacent to the external auditory meatus. The pinnas were folded onto the housing of the microphones and wrapped
with Scotch tape. The binaural cross-talk with this arrangement was
attenuated by 35-40 dB.
Spikes were fed to a window discriminator and then to a Power
Macintosh 7300 computer controlled by a custom-made real time clock.
Raster displays, peristimulus time histograms, and rate-level functions
were generated and graphically displayed. Unless otherwise noted, each
raster display was generated from the discharges evoked by 20 presentations of a signal at a fixed intensity.
After a unit was isolated, its BF, threshold at BF, and binaural type
were determined audiovisually. Binaural properties were determined by
presenting a BF tone burst 10-30 dB above threshold, first to the
contralateral (excitatory) ear, then to the ipsilateral (inhibitory)
ear, and then to both ears simultaneously. When presented simultaneously, ipsilateral intensities, ranging from 20-30 dB below
to 20-30 dB above the intensity of the contralateral ear, were
presented to determine the ipsilateral intensities that suppressed contralaterally evoked discharges.
Spike counts evoked by increasing ipsilateral intensities of binaural
signals were normalized in terms of the percentage change from the
maximum response. Maximum response was the spike count evoked by the
contralateral signal alone or the spike count evoked by a binaural
signal with the lowest ipsilateral intensity, an ipsilateral intensity
that was always below threshold for evoking inhibition.
In many ICc recordings we presented an initial and a trailing signal to
evaluate the effects of an initial signal on the binaural properties
evoked by trailing signals. In all of these experiments, the first
signal was always a 5-10 msec FM signal that swept downward by 10-30
kHz. The initial and terminal frequencies were adjusted so that the
frequencies swept through the BF of the neuron. The binaural trailing
signals were either FM sweeps, identical to the first FM signal, or BF
tone bursts. We did not use tone bursts as the initial signals because
in the vast majority of ICc neurons, BF tone bursts at the
contralateral (excitatory) ear evoke an excitation followed by a
long-lasting inhibition (Klug et al., 1999
; Bauer et al., 2000
). The
inhibition prevents ICc neurons from responding to trailing signals and
creates long recovery times. In contrast, FM sweeps produce such
inhibition much less frequently, and most ICc neurons recover within a
few milliseconds (G. Pollak et al., 1977
; G. D. Pollak et al.,
1977
).
After recording the responses of a cell to these signals,
pharmacological agents were iontophoretically applied, and the
responses to the same signals were recorded again. During application
of bicuculline or the cocktail of bicuculline and strychnine,
rate-level functions were monitored while ejection currents of from 10 to 60 nA were applied. For each ejection current, rate-level functions were obtained until the rate-level function stabilized. After the
responses were stable, the complement of tone bursts and FM signals was
presented again, and the same response features were obtained for
comparison with those obtained before the application of drugs. The
ejection current was then switched off, and the cell was allowed to
recover. Recovery was complete when both the shape of the rate-level
function returned to its predrug form and the maximum spike count
returned to the predrug value. In many cases, however, contact with the
unit was lost before recovery was complete. Because recovery times were
usually 10-20 min, when neurons were lost before recovery was
attained, we allowed at least 30 min before searching for another neuron.
Procedures for reversibly inactivating the DNLL. We opted to
inactivate the DNLL with iontophoretic application of kynurenic acid
rather than with pressure. The main reason was that we wanted to
minimize any potential tissue damage caused by the mechanical deformations that result from the relatively large volumes of liquid
injected with pressure. Thus, we wanted to inactivate repeatedly the
DNLL and be confident that the previous inactivation had not caused
damage to the DNLL.
We first determined the dimensions of the DNLL. The DNLL stains
intensely with cytochrome oxidase and stands out clearly from other
structures (Markovitz and Pollak, 1994
). We processed four brains for
cytochrome oxidase and determined the largest rostrocaudal, mediolateral, and dorsoventral extent of the DNLL. On average, the
dimensions were as follows: rostrocaudal 554 µm, mediolateral 524 µm, and dorsoventral 282 µm. The histological and other procedures used to determine these dimensions are described below. Assuming that kynurenic acid spreads spherically from the injection site, we
calculated that the required radius of spread had to be ~275 µm to
inactivate most of the DNLL.
We next obtained an estimate of how far kynurenic acid spreads from the
ejection barrel. This was accomplished by making multibarrel electrodes
in which the tips of the recording electrodes were 100-275 µm beyond
the tips of the multibarrel electrodes from which the kynurenic acid
was ejected. We then recorded from 11 single units in the ICc of four
bats. The ICc was used because it was easily accessible. With
appropriate adjustments of ejection currents, discharges could be
completely suppressed within 1-3 min, even when the recording
electrode was 275 µm distant from the ejection electrodes, and
discharges recovered within 3-5 min (e.g., Fig.
2A). Reapplication of
kynurenic acid again completely suppressed discharges, and
responsiveness again recovered within 3-5 min (Fig.
2B). The degree of suppression, the time it took to
achieve suppression, and the time for recovery were all dosage dependent (e.g., Fig. 2B). These results provide
confidence that iontophoretic application of kynurenic acid inactivated
much of the DNLL and may even have spread slightly beyond the
dorsoventral limits of the DNLL. Furthermore, it shows that inactivated
neurons recover and suggests that repeated applications of kynurenic
acid produce no tissue damage.

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Figure 2.
Inactivation of single-unit activity by
iontophoresis of kynurenic acid. Tone bursts were presented once every
5 sec. Twelve tone bursts were presented each minute; responses to each
presentation are shown as horizontally aligned
squares. Tone bursts were presented for 1-2 min before
kynurenic acid was applied, and the responses are shown as the
columns of squares at the
top of each record. The times at which the iontophoresis
of kynurenic acid was initiated and terminated are indicated by
dashed horizontal lines. A, Iontophoretic
application of kynurenic acid for 5 min (hatched vertical
bar) blocked excitation at sites distant from the recording
electrode. The tip of the recording electrode was 275 µm from the
ejection barrels. Within 1 min, kynurenic acid completely suppressed
discharges at the recording electrode. The neuron recovered in 5 min
and responded to the BF tones bursts as it did before drug application.
Ejection current was 200 nA. B, In this example, the tip
of the recording electrode was 100 µm from the ejection barrels, and
the neuron was inactivated twice. For the first inactivation
(1), the ejection current of kynurenic acid was
100 nA applied for 2 min. The neuron recovered after 2 min. The neuron
was then inactivated a second time (2) with an
ejection current of 200 nA. The higher ejection current suppressed the
discharges and resulted in a longer recovery period. The recordings in
both A and B were conducted in the same
animal.
|
|
For DNLL inactivation experiments, the location of the DNLL was
initially identified using a single-barrel electrode, using the
criteria described above. After the DNLL was located with the
single-barrel pipette, a multibarrel electrode was put in its place and
was advanced while multiunit responses were monitored to ensure that
the multibarrel electrode was in the DNLL. The inactivating electrode
was positioned midway along the dorsoventral extent of the DNLL.
For each neuron we determined the percentage relief from inhibition
because of DNLL inactivation. Spike counts evoked by binaural signals
before inactivation were normalized in terms of the percentage change
from the maximum response. Normalized spike counts were then determined
during DNLL inactivation, and the difference between the two functions
is given as the percentage relief from inhibition. For example, if
contralaterally evoked discharges were completely suppressed at a given
ipsilateral intensity, the suppression would be 100%. If, at the same
ipsilateral intensity, the suppression was 60% during DNLL
inactivation, the percentage relief at that ipsilateral intensity is
40%. Our criterion for "relief" was at least a 20% relief of the
suppression produced at those ipsilateral intensities that, before
inactivation, suppressed contralaterally evoked discharges by at least
50%.
Histological procedures. For localizing electrode locations
in the DNLL after injections of rhodamine conjugated to dextran, animals were allowed to survive for 1 d. They then were deeply anesthetized with Metofane and perfused intracardially with 0.1 M phosphate buffer followed by 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer. Brains were removed, post-fixed for
4-24 hr, and then kept overnight in 30% sucrose. Sections were cut on
a freezing microtome and mounted in Flouromount G (Southern
Biotechnology, Birmingham, AL). Sections were viewed under a
fluorescent microscope, and images of the DNLL were captured using a
video frame grabber for archival purposes.
To determine the dimensions of the DNLL, bats were perfused as
described above, and the brains were blocked and post-fixed for 24 hr
before submersion in 30% sucrose. Sections (40 or 50 µm) were made
through the portion of the brain containing the DNLL. Two brains were
cut in the sagittal plane, and two others were cut in the transverse
plane. Sections were processed using procedures described by Wong-Riley
(1979)
. Sections were mounted and incubated in the dark at 37°C for
1-2 hr until brown reaction product was observed in the tissue. The
incubation medium contained 50 mg of diaminobenzidine
tetrahydrochloride (Sigma) in 90 ml of 0.1 M phosphate
buffer, pH 7.4, 15 mg of cytochrome C type III (Sigma), and sucrose.
Sections were imaged with a video frame grabber, and areas were
computed with NIH Image software.
 |
RESULTS |
We report on 150 EI cells from the ICc and 113 EI neurons from the
DNLL of Mexican free-tailed bats. The BFs, the frequencies to
which each neuron was most sensitive, of the ICc neurons ranged from 19 to 36 kHz, and the BFs of the DNLL cells ranged from 18 to 79 kHz. The
EI property of each neuron was determined by presenting a sound to the
excitatory ear at a fixed intensity that was 10-30 dB above threshold
and then presenting the same sound to the inhibitory ear at
progressively increasing intensities. Because the intensity at the
excitatory ear was fixed, each change in intensity at the inhibitory
ear produced a different IID. The more intense inhibitory signals
strongly suppressed discharges evoked by excitatory signals in most ICc
cells. The degree of maximal suppression varied among the ICc
population, although the maximal spike suppression in most cells (71%)
was at least 90%. The average suppression was 91% and ranged from 30 to 100%.
The focus of this study was on the influences of the GABAergic
projections from the DNLL to the opposite ICc and the functional significance of those influences. Below we first discuss some features
of inhibition in DNLL neurons. We then show that many ICc neurons are
influenced by GABAergic innervation from the opposite DNLL, and in the
final sections we show the functional significance of those DNLL
projections on the processing of IIDs in the ICc.
Persistent inhibition is a key feature of DNLL neurons
Previous studies in mustache bats have shown that inhibition in
the DNLL, evoked by stimulation of the ear ipsilateral to it, is
persistent, in that the inhibition often lasts for many milliseconds
after the end of the signal that evoked it (Yang and Pollak, 1994a
,b
,
1998
). The duration of the inhibitory persistence, which can be as long
as 80 msec, changes little with stimulus duration but increases with
intensity and typically reaches a maximum duration 20-40 dB above the
threshold for inhibition (Yang and Pollak, 1994a
,c
). Here we show that
persistent inhibition is also a prominent feature of DNLL neurons in
Mexican free-tailed bats. In a later section we demonstrate the
functional impact that persistent inhibition in the DNLL has on many
cells in the ICc.
We tested 50 DNLL cells in Mexican free-tailed bats for persistent
inhibition and illustrate this inhibition with the DNLL neuron in
Figure 3. Figure 3A shows that
the neuron was driven by tone bursts presented to the contralateral
(excitatory) ear. Stimulation of the ipsilateral (inhibitory) ear
evoked no responses (data not shown). To show that ipsilateral
stimulation evoked an inhibition in the DNLL, we created background
discharges by iontophoresing the excitatory transmitters glutamate and
aspartate (Fig. 3B). Ipsilateral (inhibitory) tone bursts,
at 40 dB sound pressure level (SPL) and 10 msec in duration, produced a
gap in the glutamate-evoked discharges that lasted for 70 msec (Fig. 3C). Thus, the inhibition persisted for 60 msec beyond the
duration of the 10 msec tone that evoked it. That the inhibition
occurred in the DNLL cell was confirmed by its elimination when
bicuculline and strychnine were applied iontophoretically. The maximal
periods of persistent inhibition varied among the 50 DNLL neurons that we tested and were typically <60 msec. The average period of the maximum persistent inhibition was 18 msec and ranged from 3 to 80 msec.

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Figure 3.
Excitation and inhibition in a DNLL neuron.
A, Sustained response evoked by a BF tone burst (20 dB
SPL; horizontal bar) presented to the ear
contralateral to the DNLL is shown. B, Background
activity evoked by iontophoretic application of glutamic and aspartic
acids (Glu/Asp) is shown. C, A 10 msec BF tone burst (40 dB SPL) at the ear ipsilateral to the DNLL (inhibitory ear) inhibits
Glu/Asp-evoked background activity. The inhibition, seen as the
gap in the background activity, had a total duration of
70 msec. Thus, the inhibition persisted for 60 msec beyond the duration
of the 10 msec tone burst that evoked the inhibition. D,
Ipsilaterally evoked inhibition was abolished when a cocktail of
bicuculline and strychnine was applied. The blockage of inhibition
combined with the enhanced excitability caused by the Glu/Asp unmasked
a subthreshold excitation. The excitation was not evoked in the absence
of Glu/Asp, even when inhibition was blocked by bicuculline and
strychnine. Not all DNLL cells displayed such a subthreshold excitation
under these conditions. Ejection currents were as follows: Glu/Asp, 15 nA, and bicuculline and strychnine cocktail, 30 nA. Time
bars under responses have been shifted to illustrate the
relationship between the stimulus and response durations. BF was 35.2 kHz. Bic, Bicuculline; Strych,
strychnine.
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Persistent inhibition in the DNLL was evoked not only by tone bursts
but also by brief FM sweeps, so long as the FM signal swept through the
best frequency of the DNLL cells. The average persistent inhibition
evoked by FM signals, measured in 21 DNLL neurons, was 13 msec and
ranged from 4 to 38 msec. In 8 of the 21 neurons, we measured
persistent inhibition evoked by both tone bursts and FM sweeps. As
illustrated by the neuron in Figure 4, the two types of stimuli evoked inhibitory persistence of similar, but
not identical, duration. Tone bursts usually caused a slightly longer
persistent inhibition than did FM sweeps. In these eight neurons, the
average FM-evoked inhibitory persistence was 12 msec, whereas the
average tone-evoked inhibitory persistence was 17 msec. Previous
studies reported comparable inhibitory periods evoked by tones and
other signals in DNLL neurons of mustache bats (Yang and Pollak,
1998
).

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Figure 4.
Persistent inhibition in the DNLL is evoked both
by tone bursts and by FM sweeps. Top, Control showing
background discharges evoked by iontophoresis of glutamic and aspartic
acid when no stimulus was presented. Bottom, The gaps in
the background evoked by 2 msec tone bursts or 2 msec FM sweeps. The
tone burst evoked a total inhibitory period of 16 msec. The initial 2 msec of inhibition occurred over the duration of the tone burst, and
the inhibition then persisted for an additional 14 msec. The 2 msec FM
sweep evoked a persistent inhibition of 12 msec in the same DNLL
neuron. The threshold at BF was 10 dB SPL. Time bars
under responses have been shifted to illustrate the relationship
between the stimulus and response durations. Tone bursts were 40.4 kHz
(BF) at 30 dB SPL. The FM was 30 dB SPL, the same intensity as the tone
burst, and swept from 50 to 30 kHz and thus through the BF of the
neuron.
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Discharges evoked by contralateral stimulation are suppressed
during periods of persistent inhibition
The persistence of inhibition suggests that a signal presented to
the ipsilateral (inhibitory) ear should prevent DNLL neurons from
responding to signals presented to the contralateral (excitatory) ear
for a period of time after the inhibitory signal. To test this, we
presented binaural signals in which the excitatory signals were
presented at various times after the inhibitory signals. An example is
shown in Figure 5. When the signals were
presented simultaneously, the discharges evoked by stimulation of the
excitatory ear were completely inhibited (data not shown). As the
excitatory signal was delayed, the discharges continued to be
suppressed. In this neuron, discharges began to appear at a delay of 10 msec, and full recovery occurred when the excitatory signal was
presented 30 msec after the end of the inhibitory signal. This shows
that the persistent inhibition generated by signals at the ipsilateral ear suppressed the excitation evoked by signals at the contralateral ear. The suppression of contralaterally evoked discharges during periods of persistent inhibition was seen in all 19 neurons tested in
Mexican free-tailed bats. Moreover, it was seen previously in almost
all neurons tested in the mustache bat DNLL, where it was also shown
that the suppression of contralaterally evoked discharges during
periods of persistent inhibition could be rescued by blocking
inhibition at the DNLL with bicuculline and strychnine (Yang and
Pollak, 1994c
, 1998
).

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Figure 5.
Persistent inhibition in DNLL evoked by an
inhibitory signal at the ear ipsilateral to the DNLL suppresses
discharges evoked by excitatory signals presented to the contralateral
ear. Top, Complete suppression of contralateral
(excitatory) signals by ipsilateral signals when the two were presented
at an interval of 0 msec is shown. Bottom, Partial
recovery occurred when the excitatory signal followed the inhibitory
signals by 10-20 msec. Full recovery first occurred 30 msec after the
inhibitory signal was over. The excitatory signals were 5 msec BF tone
bursts and were 30 dB SPL. The inhibitory signals were 10 msec BF tone
bursts at 50 dB SPL. BF was 36.1 kHz.
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Inactivation of DNLL relieves inhibition in many ICc cells
The previous section dealt with stimuli that inhibited DNLL cells.
In this section we deal with excitation of the DNLL and show that DNLL
excitation provides inhibition to most, but not all, ICc neurons. We
studied the effects of DNLL excitation in 78 ICc neurons by evaluating
their EI properties before, during, and after DNLL inactivation
produced by iontophoretic application of kynurenic acid. In 37% (29 of
78) of the ICc cells, inactivating the DNLL had no effect on their EI
properties. In these neurons, the inhibition evoked by increasing the
signal intensity to the ipsilateral ear was virtually the same during
DNLL inactivation as it was before DNLL inactivation (Fig.
6). This suggests that the DNLL played
little or no role in the formation of the EI properties in these ICc
cells.

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Figure 6.
An ICc neuron that was not influenced by
inactivation of the opposite DNLL. Bottom, Raster
displays are shown of the responses evoked by binaural signals in which
the intensity at the ear ipsilateral to the ICc (inhibitory ear) was
increased by increments of 5 dB. Top, Suppression
is plotted graphically. Here the suppression evoked by increasing
ipsilateral intensities is plotted as the percentage of maximum
response evoked. The functions obtained before (control) and during
DNLL inactivation are similar, suggesting that the DNLL had little or
no effect on the ipsilaterally evoked spike suppression in this cell.
BF was 23.3 kHz.
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In most ICc neurons (49 of 78; 63%), however, DNLL inactivation
reduced ipsilateral inhibition by at least 20%, indicating that the
DNLL played a prominent role in the formation of their EI properties.
On average, the maximum relief from inhibition among these 49 ICc cells
was 41% and ranged from 20 to 100% (Fig. 7). An example is shown in Figure
8. This was a strongly inhibited EI
neuron in which signal intensities of 30 and 40 dB SPL at the ipsilateral (inhibitory) ear completely suppressed discharges evoked by
contralateral (excitatory) stimulation. During inactivation of the
opposite DNLL, ipsilateral (inhibitory) signals produced a much smaller
decline in spike count than the same signals did before inactivation.
For example, with an ipsilateral intensity of 30 dB SPL, the spike
count was 73% of the maximal count, a 27% suppression, whereas before
inactivation the same ipsilateral intensity caused complete
suppression. When the intensity at the inhibitory ear was increased to
40 dB SPL, which had also previously suppressed discharges completely,
the spike count was reduced to 57% of maximum, a 43% suppression. The
DNLL recovered within 10 min, and stimulation at the inhibitory ear
again suppressed spike counts by 100%.

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Figure 7.
Maximum relief from inhibition by DNLL
inactivation in 78 ICc neurons, the EI properties of which were tested
before and during DNLL inactivation. Normalized spike counts to
binaural signals were determined before and during DNLL inactivation.
The difference between the value before and during inactivation is the
percentage relief from inhibition. Shown here is the largest percentage
relief for each cell. The average maximum relief was 41% among the 49 neurons that had relief of 20% or greater.
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Figure 8.
DNLL inactivation relieved ipsilaterally evoked
spike suppression in an ICc neuron. Bottom, Raster
displays are shown of spike suppression evoked by increasing intensity
at the ear ipsilateral to the ICc (inhibitory ear) before (control),
during, and after DNLL inactivation (recovery). The relief from
inhibition caused by DNLL inactivation is especially apparent at
ipsilateral intensities of 30-40 dB SPL. Top, The
percentage of maximum response evoked by increasing ipsilateral
intensities before and during DNLL inactivation and when the neuron
recovered from inactivation is graphically plotted. BF was 29.5 kHz.
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As with the cell in Figure 8, DNLL inactivation caused substantial, but
not complete, relief from inhibition in most ICc cells. To evaluate
whether DNLL inactivation eliminated most, if not all, ipsilaterally
evoked GABAergic inhibition, we iontophoretically applied bicuculline
to the ICc cell either during DNLL inactivation or after recovery from
DNLL inactivation in 18 neurons. Bicuculline blocks not only the
GABAergic innervation from the DNLL but other GABAergic inputs to the
ICc cell as well. In general, relief of inhibition in the 18 cells was
greater with bicuculline than with DNLL inactivation. Two
representative examples are shown in Figure 9. For the neuron in Figure
9A, DNLL inactivation reduced inhibition from ~98% of the
maximum response before inactivation to ~43% when intensity at the
inhibitory ear was 50-60 dB SPL. However, when bicuculline was
iontophoresed while the DNLL was inactivated, the inhibition was
reduced even further and relieved almost 80% of the inhibition. For
the neuron in Figure 9B, DNLL inactivation relieved ~32%
of the inhibition (at 50 dB SPL). After recovery from DNLL
inactivation, bicuculline was applied and relieved almost all
inhibition. Thus DNLL inactivation relieved inhibition, but with few
exceptions, it alone did not eliminate all inhibition evoked by the
ipsilateral (inhibitory) ear. This suggests either that there were, in
addition to the DNLL, other sources of inhibition evoked by the
inhibitory ear or that iontophoresis of kynurenic acid did not
completely block DNLL activity. Although we cannot distinguish between
these interpretations, the relevant point is that DNLL inactivation
relieved at least 20% of the inhibition evoked by the ipsilateral
(inhibitory) ear in 63% of the ICc neurons that we tested.

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Figure 9.
Two ICc neurons in which DNLL inactivation
partially relieved ipsilaterally evoked inhibition but blocking
GABAergic inhibition with bicuculline produced even greater relief.
Signals were 10 msec tone bursts at the BF. BFs were 27.1 kHz
(A) and 24.9 kHz (B). The
ejection current for bicuculline was 60 nA in both A and
B. BIC, Bicuculline.
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Impact of DNLL persistent inhibition on ICc neurons
Here we test the hypothesis mentioned previously, that the
functional impact of persistent inhibition in the DNLL on the opposite ICc is to influence the processing of multiple sound sources that emanate from different regions of space (Yang and Pollak, 1994c
, 1998
;
Pollak, 1997
). The hypothesis is shown diagrammatically in Figure
10 and logically combines two principal
features of the circuit. The first feature, shown in Figure
10A, applies to a binaural signal that favors the
ipsilateral (inhibitory) ear when presented alone. It shows that the
excitation evoked by one ear can be strongly or completely suppressed
by stimulation of the other ear and that the suppression at the ICc
cell derives from the GABAergic inhibition provided by the opposite
DNLL. The second feature is that a signal that favors the ear
ipsilateral to the DNLL generates a persistent inhibition in DNLL
neurons that innervate the opposite ICc (Fig. 10B).
In Figure 10B we show this signal as a monaural
signal or prepulse, although the same logic would apply to a binaural
signal with an IID that favors the ear ipsilateral to the DNLL. By
combining these features, the hypothesis predicts that presenting an
initial signal, which is either monaural as shown here or binaural with an IID that produces DNLL persistent inhibition, should reconfigure the
circuit and thereby change the way the ICc cell responds to a binaural
trailing signal. Specifically, the initial presentation of a monaural
prepulse (or a binaural signal) should drive the ICc, but it should
also generate a persistent inhibition in the DNLL (Fig.
10B). The key argument is that during the period when the DNLL is persistently inhibited, the ICc cell should be deprived of
its ipsilaterally evoked inhibition, thereby allowing the ICc cell to
respond to trailing binaural signals to which it previously responded
poorly or not at all (Fig. 10C). We also emphasize that a
corollary of the hypothesis applies to ICc cells that are not innervated by the opposite DNLL. In those cells, the hypothesis predicts that the introduction of a prepulse should have no effect on
the trailing binaural signal; i.e., the ICc cell should respond to the
trailing signals as it did when the same trailing signals were
presented alone.

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Figure 10.
Schematic diagram of auditory pathways showing
how a prepulse presented to the ear contralateral to the ICc could
reconfigure the circuit and allow the ICc cell to respond to a trailing
signal to which it was unresponsive when presented alone.
A, A binaural signal with an IID that favors the ear
ipsilateral to the ICc drives two projections. The first is an
excitatory projection from a lower monaural nucleus (e.g., the cochlear
nucleus) and a GABAergic inhibitory projection from the opposite DNLL.
At this IID, the inhibitory projection from the DNLL suppresses the
excitation from the contralateral ear. B, A monaural
prepulse evokes a persistent inhibition in the ipsilateral DNLL
(indicated by the stippling) and excites the
contralateral ICc. Inhibition in the DNLL is evoked by a glycinergic
projection from the ipsilateral LSO and a GABAergic inhibition from the
opposite DNLL through the commissure of Probst (Yang and Pollak,
1994a ,b ). The excitation of the ICc is via an excitatory projection
from a lower monaural nucleus, shown here generically as coming from
the cochlear nucleus. C, The initial presentation of the
monaural prepulse persistently inhibits the DNLL but excites the ICc,
in the same way as shown in B. When a trailing binaural
signal that favors the inhibitory ear follows shortly thereafter, the
ICc neuron now responds to the trailing signal. The reason is that the
prepulse generated a persistent inhibition in the DNLL that deprived
the ICc cell of the inhibition that would be evoked by a binaural
trailing signal if it were presented alone. Thus, the weaker stimulus
at the contralateral (excitatory) ear evoked by the trailing signal is
now free to drive the ICc cell.
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To test this hypothesis, we recorded from 96 EI neurons in the ICc. In
each neuron we presented a monaural signal, or prepulse, to the ear
that both excited the ICc and generated a persistent inhibition in the
DNLL. The prepulse was followed by binaural signals with different IIDs
(Fig. 10C). We could not evaluate the effects of an initial
signal (prepulse) in 42 of the 96 cells. In those cells, recovery was
poor, and trailing signals evoked either no responses or very weak
responses when they followed the first pulses by 15 msec or less. In
these cases the prepulse presented to the contralateral ear apparently
evoked both an excitation followed by a long-lasting inhibition at the
ICc cell, which suppressed responses to the trailing signals for
15
msec. Long recovery times have been reported in previous IC studies
concerned with the processing of multiple sound sources (Yin,
1994
; Fitzpatrick et al., 1995
). The functional significance of
this contralaterally evoked persistent inhibition exhibited by many ICc
neurons is unknown, and this puzzling feature of the IC has been
discussed in a previous report (Bauer et al., 2000
).
Of the 96 cells, 54 cells (56%) recovered quickly. As shown below,
almost all of these neurons were consistent with the hypotheses presented above for ICc cells that are innervated by the DNLL and for
ICc cells that are not. We turn first to 23 of the 54 ICc cells in
which a monaural prepulse had no effect on the responses to the
trailing binaural signal. The DNLL was inactivated while recording from
12 cells. In three of these cells, DNLL inactivation relieved
ipsilateral inhibition although the prepulse did not. However, in 9 of
12 cells (75%), neither a prepulse nor DNLL inactivation relieved
inhibition, and thus neither of the manipulations affected the EI
properties evoked by the trailing binaural signals. Stated differently,
these neurons responded to the trailing binaural signal as they did
when same binaural signal (the trailing signal) was presented alone. A
representative example is shown in Figure 11. This neuron apparently was not
innervated by the opposite DNLL, and its EI property may have been
created in the LSO and then imposed on the ICc via the circuit shown in
Figure 1B.

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Figure 11.
An ICc cell in which the responses evoked by a
trailing binaural signal were not influenced either by a monaural
prepulse or by DNLL inactivation. The percent-normalized responses for
the prepulse and DNLL inactivation conditions are for the trailing
binaural signals. Both prepulse and trailing binaural signals were 10 msec FM signals that swept from 40 to 20 kHz. The FM prepulse was 40 dB
SPL.
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In marked contrast were 31 cells in which a monaural prepulse
substantially relieved ipsilateral inhibition. An example is shown in
Figure 12. When a binaural signal was
presented without a prepulse, the discharges evoked by the
contralateral ear were inhibited by ipsilateral intensities of 40 dB
SPL or greater (Fig. 12, bottom left). When a monaural
prepulse was introduced and the same binaural signals followed the
prepulse 1.0 msec later, there was only weak inhibition of the binaural
signal, even at an ipsilateral intensity of 45 dB SPL, an intensity
that completely inhibited the same binaural signal when there was no
prepulse. The relief from inhibition afforded by the prepulse declined
as the interval between the prepulse and trailing signals was
lengthened (Fig. 12, top). When the interval was lengthened
to 3 msec, the amount of relief was slightly reduced, and when the
delay was lengthened further, to 5 msec, the prepulse no longer
produced any relief from inhibition. Thus, the presentation of the
prepulse at appropriate intervals relieved inhibition, allowing the ICc
neuron to respond to the binaural trailing signal at IIDs that
completely inhibited the cell when the trailing signal was presented
alone. The intervals that were effective for relieving inhibition were
very short in this ICc neuron. Our interpretation is that this ICc cell
received innervation from DNLL cells that had very short periods of
persistent inhibition. Because periods of persistent inhibition were
longer in most DNLL cells, the effective intervals between the prepulse and trailing signals were also substantially longer in other ICc neurons, as we show below.

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Figure 12.
Prepulses relieved ipsilateral inhibition evoked
by trailing binaural signals. Bottom left, Raster
displays of binaural signals presented alone. Note the suppression of
responses evoked by contralateral stimulation as the intensity at the
ear ipsilateral to the ICc was increased. Bottom middle,
right, Raster displays evoked by an FM prepulse at the ear
contralateral to the ICc, followed 1.0 and 5.0 msec later by trailing
binaural FM signals. Note the relief from inhibition afforded by the
1.0 msec interval when the ipsilateral intensities of the trailing
signals were 40-45 dB SPL. Relief was over at the 5.0 msec interval,
presumably because the persistent inhibition in the DNLL had ended at
that time. FM signals swept from 40 to 15 kHz. Top,
Suppression produced by ipsilateral intensities as a percentage of the
maximum response. Included are data from the 3.0 msec interval between
the prepulse and trailing signals, which are not shown in raster
displays.
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Although we did not inactivate the DNLL in the neuron shown above, we
did inactivate the DNLL with kynurenic acid in 11 cells in which a
prepulse relieved the inhibition produced by the trailing binaural
signal. In all 11 cells, relief from inhibition was obtained from DNLL
inactivation, and the relief was similar to the relief obtained with a
prepulse. An example is shown in Figure
13. Here we first selected an IID that
produced a strong, but not complete, suppression of contralaterally
evoked discharges and measured the relief from inhibition against that
suppression. In this cell, the prepulse was an FM sweep that did not
drive the ICc cell, although it swept through the BF of the ICc cells.
The trailing binaural signals were BF tone bursts. Because we have
shown that FM sweeps effectively generate persistent inhibition in the
DNLL, we assume that if the DNLL innervated this ICc cell, the FM
prepulse should inhibit those DNLL cells although the FM sweep did not drive the ICc cell. Figure 13A shows that a 15 dB SPL tone
burst presented only to the excitatory ear evoked 39 spikes, but when the same excitatory signal was presented simultaneously with a 25 dB
SPL signal at the inhibitory ear, only six spikes were evoked. When the
DNLL was inactivated with kynurenic acid, the same binaural signal that
evoked previously only six spikes now evoked 30 spikes, showing that
the opposite DNLL provided most, if not all, of the ipsilateral
inhibition evoked by the binaural signal. Introduction of the FM
prepulse relieved the inhibition substantially. At an interval of 10 msec, the trailing binaural signal evoked 26 spikes (Fig.
13B), whereas the same binaural signal presented alone
evoked only six spikes. This amount of relief from inhibition was
similar to the relief that occurred when the DNLL was pharmacologically inactivated. The amount of relief declined as the interval was lengthened to 20 msec (trailing signal evoked 17 spikes), and at an
interval of 30 msec the trailing signal evoked only nine spikes, a
spike count comparable with the six spikes obtained when the binaural
trailing signal was presented without the prepulse. Thus, as with the
cell in Figure 12, the prepulse not only relieved inhibition but its
efficacy dissipated over time, as did the persistent inhibition in the
DNLL (e.g., Fig. 5). Moreover, because most, if not all, of the
ipsilateral inhibition in this cell derived from the opposite DNLL, the
relief from inhibition afforded by the prepulse must have been caused
by the generation of persistent inhibition in the DNLL by the
prepulse.

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Figure 13.
DNLL inactivation mimicked the relief of
inhibition produced by a monaural prepulse. A, Control
responses evoked without a prepulse. Signals presented to the ear
contralateral to the ICc (the excitatory ear) are shown as
unfilled bars, whereas signals presented to the ear
ipsilateral to the ICc (the inhibitory ear) are shown as hatched
bars. BF tone bursts (30 kHz) presented to only the
contralateral (excitatory) ear at 15 dB SPL evoked 39 spikes. Binaural
tone bursts, having the same contralateral intensity (15 dB SPL) and an
ipsilateral intensity of 25 dB SPL, evoked only six discharges, an 85%
suppression. When the DNLL was inactivated, the same binaural signal
evoked 30 spikes, a 23% suppression. Thus, inactivating the DNLL
relieved ~62% of the ipsilaterally evoked inhibition. The
diagonal slash marks on the horizontal
line indicate that tone alone, binaural, and DNLL inactivation
records were each obtained separately and independently.
B, Relief from inhibition afforded by a 5.0 msec FM
prepulse presented to the ear contralateral to the ICc (the excitatory
ear). The FM swept from 40 to 20 kHz. The neuron was unresponsive to
the FM signal but responded briskly to the trailing binaural tone
bursts. The trailing binaural signal evoked 26 spikes when it followed
the prepulse by 10 msec (a 33% suppression). Thus the prepulse
relieved ~52% of the ipsilaterally evoked inhibition, a value close
to the 62% relieved by DNLL inactivation. Less relief was achieved
when the interval was lengthened to 20 msec, and there was no relief at
30 msec, the longest interval.
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Initial binaural signals also relieve inhibition generated by
trailing signals in the ICc
In the above sections we showed that a monaural signal relieved
the inhibition generated by a trailing binaural signal. Those conditions were artificial in that sounds almost always stimulate both
ears. Here we show that relief from inhibition was also produced with
two binaural signals, in which the first had an IID that favored the
contralateral ear and therefore drove the ICc cell and inhibited the
DNLL, whereas the second, or trailing signal, had an IID that favored
the ipsilateral ear, which drove the DNLL and inhibited the ICc cell.
This stimulus arrangement simulates the reception of two signals that
emanate from different regions of space. As with the results shown in
the previous section, the relief from inhibition was obtained in ICc
cells that were innervated by the DNLL, and no relief was observed in
ICc cells that were not innervated by the DNLL.
We tested 12 ICc cells with two binaural signals. Two of the 12 cells
showed no inhibitory relief from the initial signal, and in both of
those cells DNLL inactivation also provided no relief. In 10 cells,
however, initial signals relieved inhibition evoked by the trailing
signals. In four of those cells, we also inactivated the DNLL with
kynurenic acid. In all four neurons, the relief achieved with the
initial binaural signal was mimicked by pharmacological inactivation of
the DNLL. As with the neurons in Figures 12 and 13, we also show that
the relief afforded by the initial binaural signal is effective only
for a limited time window that presumably corresponds to the periods of
persistent inhibition in the DNLL.
We illustrate relief of inhibition with the two ICc cells in Figures
14 and
15. For the neuron in Figure 14, the
IID of the trailing signal was 0 dB, and responses to this binaural
signal presented alone are shown in the top panel. The IID
of the initial signal was +20 dB (excitatory ear more intense). When
the initial and trailing signals were presented at intervals ranging
from 2 to 20 msec, the spike counts evoked by the trailing binaural
signal were much larger than were the spike counts evoked by the same binaural signal when it was presented alone. The enhanced spike counts
at the ICc evoked by the trailing signal were presumably a consequence
of the persistent inhibition at the DNLL that was generated by the
initial binaural signal and that deprived the ICc cell its inhibitory
input from the ipsilateral ear. The strength of the persistent
inhibition at the DNLL was greatest during the times immediately after
the initial signal and declined over time, as shown previously. Thus,
the highest spike count was evoked at the shortest delay (2 msec) and
then declined as the delay was lengthened to 10 and 20 msec. At the
longest delays, of 30 and 40 msec, the spike counts evoked by the
trailing signal were comparable with the spike counts evoked by the
same signal when presented alone. It appears, therefore, that the
persistent inhibition at the DNLL was over at the longest intervals,
thereby allowing the ipsilateral tone of the trailing signal to again
inhibit the discharges evoked by the contralateral tone.

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Figure 14.
Initial binaural signals that favor the ear
contralateral to the ICc (the excitatory ear) relieve ipsilateral
inhibition evoked by trailing signals. All signals were 7.0 msec FM
signals that swept from 45 to 20 kHz. Signals presented to the ear
contralateral to the ICc (the excitatory ear) are shown as
unfilled bars, whereas signals presented to the ear
ipsilateral to the ICc (the inhibitory ear) are shown as hatched
bars. Top, Control showing that 13 spikes were
evoked by binaural signals presented with equal intensities at the two
ears (IID, 0 dB). Bottom, An initial binaural signal,
having an IID of +20 dB (excitatory ear louder), relieved ipsilateral
inhibition evoked by the trailing binaural signal. When the interval
was 2.0 msec, the trailing signal evoked 47 spikes, whereas it evoked
only six spikes when presented alone. Increasing the interval between
the prepulse and trailing signal caused progressively less relief.
Relief was over at 30 msec, because the trailing signal evoked almost
the same spike count as it did when presented alone. C,
Contralateral; I, ipsilateral.
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Figure 15.
DNLL inactivation mimicked the relief of
inhibition produced by an initial binaural signal. All signals were 10 msec FMs that swept from 40 to 20 kHz. Signals presented to the ear
contralateral to the ICc (the excitatory ear) are shown as
unfilled bars, whereas signals presented to the ear
ipsilateral to the ICc (the inhibitory ear) are shown as hatched
bars. A, Control responses evoked without a
prepulse. Tone bursts presented to only the contralateral (excitatory)
ear at 20 dB SPL evoked 32 spikes. A binaural signal, having the same
contralateral intensity (20 dB SPL) but an ipsilateral intensity of 40 dB SPL, evoked only six discharges, an 82% suppression. When the DNLL
was inactivated, the same binaural signal evoked no suppression. Thus
inactivating the DNLL relieved 100% of the ipsilaterally evoked
inhibition. B, Relief from inhibition afforded by a
binaural FM prepulse. The IID of the prepulse was +10 dB, and the
excitatory ear was more intense. The trailing binaural signal evoked 26 spikes when it followed the prepulse by 3.0 msec (a suppression of
19%). Thus the prepulse relieved ~81% of the ipsilaterally evoked
inhibition. Slightly less relief was achieved when the interval was
lengthened to 13 msec, and relief was over when the interval was 23 msec.
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A similar result is shown for the neuron in Figure 15. Here the first
signal relieved most of the ipsilateral inhibition at delays of 3 and
13 msec, and relief was over when the interval was 23 msec. As shown in
Figure 15A, inactivation of the DNLL with kynurenic acid
eliminated all of the ipsilateral inhibition, suggesting that GABAergic
innervation from the DNLL could account for all of the ipsilateral
inhibition at this ICc cell.
The time periods over which relief from inhibition dissipated varied
among the cells to which we presented first and trailing signals at a
variety of delays. In some ICc cells, the relief afforded by the first
signal was over at short delays (e.g., Fig. 12), whereas in other
neurons the relief lasted for >15 msec (e.g., Fig. 14). We obtained an
estimate for how long, after an initial signal, the population of ICc
neurons might be relieved. To do this, in each neuron we measured the
percentage relief at the shortest delay, which almost always produced
the greatest relief, and the first delay at which relief was no longer
present. On average, the relief dissipated by 9%/ms. Thus, on average,
relief from inhibition attributable to an initial signal was over after ~10 msec.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Here we showed that the DNLL provides a potent GABAergic
inhibition to the opposite ICc. The inhibition shapes the EI properties of most ICc cells, a finding consistent with numerous previous studies
(Faingold et al., 1991
, 1993
; Li and Kelly, 1992
; Park and Pollak,
1993
, 1994
; Klug et al., 1995
; Kidd and Kelly, 1996
; van Adel et al.,
1999
; Kelly and Kidd, 2000
). One EI property shaped in the ICc is the
IID at which the cell is maximally inhibited. For convenience, we refer
to this IID as the IID sensitivity of the neuron. Because of DNLL
influences, IID sensitivities among the ICc population range from
approximately
30 dB (ipsilateral ear more intense) to approximately
+10 dB (contralateral ear more intense) (Wenstrup et al., 1988a
; Park
and Pollak, 1993
; Park, 1998
).
The significance of this distribution of IID sensitivities is that it
provides the substrate for the population coding of IIDs generated by
high-frequency sounds (Fuzessery and Pollak, 1984
; Fuzessery et al.,
1985
; Wenstrup et al., 1986
, 1988b
). Each IID sensitivity of each
neuron determines its spatial receptive field, the regions of space
from which sounds evoke discharges (Fuzessery and Pollak, 1984
, 1985
;
Wenstrup et al., 1988b
). Assuming that a wide range of IID
sensitivities is represented in isofrequency contours of the ICc, as
occurs in the mustache bat (Wenstrup et al., 1986
), the arrangement
translates into a representation of the IID generated by the frequency
to which the neurons in that contour are tuned. The idea is that when a
complex sound emanates from a location in space, each frequency in the
spectrum of the sound generates a particular IID. The IID generated by
each frequency is then coded by the EI population response in the
corresponding frequency contour, where some EI neurons with particular
IID sensitivities are inhibited whereas other neurons, with different
IID sensitivities, are excited. Changing the location of the sound
changes the IID generated by each frequency and, thus, the population
response in each frequency contour. In this way, the EI populations in the frequency contours of the ICc can collectively encode the location
of a sound source in both azimuth and elevation from most locations in
the frontal hemifield (Fuzessery and Pollak, 1984
, 1985
; Pollak et al.,
1986
).
The importance of collicular EI neurons for sound localization is
illustrated both by the disruption in localization acuity caused by
lesions of the DNLL and by sectioning of the commissure of
Probst (Ito et al., 1996
; Kelly et al., 1996
). The DNLL, however, not
only shapes the IID sensitivities of the ICc population, but it also
changes the IID sensitivities of many ICc cells to trailing sounds.
With only a single sound source, all ICc neurons with a given IID
sensitivity respond to a frequency from a particular location in the
same way, regardless of whether or not their IID sensitivity is shaped
by the DNLL. However, an initial signal that persistently inhibits the
DNLL will degrade the spatial selectivity of those ICc cells for a
trailing signal by expanding the regions of space from which the
trailing sound can drive those cells. Our results show that this
general rule is applicable to most EI collicular neurons that are
innervated by the opposite DNLL.
The persistent inhibition in the DNLL may have consequences for
other aspects of binaural processing
The effects of DNLL persistent inhibition on the ICc should be
especially significant for those signals that generate IIDs that change
over time, such as moving sound sources or multiple sounds that emanate
from different regions of space. That the DNLL may influence motion
sensitivity of ICc cells is suggested by the differential influence
that positive and negative IIDs of initial sounds have on the responses
to subsequent sounds. These features suggest that a moving sound source
that begins in the contralateral sound field and moves with a certain
velocity into the ipsilateral sound field should evoke more vigorous
responses in an ICc cell than would be evoked when the sound source
moved from the ipsilateral into the contralateral sound field. This type of sensitivity for the direction of movement has been reported for
neurons in the IC of several mammals, including bats (Spitzer and
Semple, 1993
; Kleiser and Schuller, 1995
; Wilson and O'Neill, 1998
;
McAlpine et al., 2000
). Moreover, Keller and Takahashi (1996)
proposed
a similar mechanism to explain directionally selective motion
sensitivity in IC neurons of the barn owl.
The demonstration that an initial signal can change the spatial
selectivity of ICc cells to a trailing signal suggests that the DNLL
circuitry could contribute to a precedence-like effect. The precedence
effect was discovered in human psychophysical studies and is caused by
a mechanism that suppresses the directional information carried by
echoes. It explains how, in a reverberant room, a listener can hear
only a single sound and not the sequence of separate sounds produced by
the echoes reflected from the various surfaces and objects in the room
(Wallach et al., 1949
; Blauert, 1983
; Zurek, 1987
; Litovsky et al.,
1999
).
Precedence is classically demonstrated with two speakers, separated
along the same plane in space (Wallach et al., 1949
; Litovsky et al.,
1999
). The speakers emit identical sounds, but the sound from one
speaker is presented a few milliseconds before the sound from the other
speaker. Under these conditions, normal listeners hear a single
composite sound and perceive the composite sound as originating from
the leading speaker. The second sound is heard by the listener but is
not perceived as a separate sound, nor does it influence the perceived
location of the composite sound. Rather the second sound fuses with the
first sound and contributes to the overall volume and timbre of the
fused sound. Whether the listener hears a single, fused sound or two
separate sounds depends on the delay between the two sounds, as well as
on the duration and the complexity of the sound. If the interval
between the first and second sounds exceeds an upper limit, the two
sounds are no longer heard as a single sound but as two separate sounds
in succession, each with a perceived location in space.
One significant feature of precedence, that a trailing sound is heard
but not localized, correlates closely with the DNLL influences that we
observed. Specifically, persistent inhibition in DNLL evoked by the
first sound does not suppress the activity of ICc neurons to the
trailing sound. Rather, it allows many ICc cells to fire to trailing
signals to which they were previously poorly responsive or
unresponsive, thereby expanding the regions of space from which sound
could drive those ICc cells. Thus, the activity in the ICc should allow
the animal to hear trailing sounds, but DNLL innervated cells should
also degrade the accuracy with which the ICc population codes for their
locations because these cells constitute a large proportion of the EI
population in the IC. The degradation of the population code, in turn,
should impair the localization of the trailing signal.
Another feature of agreement is the time course of precedence and the
time course of relief from inhibition at the ICc afforded by an initial
signal. Precedence persists from a few to 20-40 msec, depending on the
experiment and type of stimulus. The average period during which a
first signal relieved the inhibition evoked by a trailing signal in the
ICc is ~1-20 msec, which falls between the short and long periods
estimated in psychophysical experiments (Blauert, 1983
; Litovsky et
al., 1999
).
We point out that the mechanisms we showed here can only account for
the precedence of high-frequency sounds, which are initially processed
binaurally in the LSO. Moreover, the first sound has to emanate from a
location off the midline, which generates IIDs that evoke a persistent
inhibition in the DNLL, followed by sounds that emanate from the other
acoustic hemifield. If the first sounds are located at or around the
midline and produce IIDs at or around 0 dB, persistent inhibition would
not be generated in the DNLL, and thus the spatial selectivity of ICc
cells for trailing sounds would not be degraded.
Precedence, however, also occurs with low frequencies, which are
initially processed binaurally in the medial superior olive. Furthermore, precedence is not limited to initial and trailing sounds
that emanate from opposite regions of the frontal sound field. These
features, together with the results from previous studies (Wickesberg
and Oertel, 1990
; Yin, 1994
; Fitzpatrick et al., 1995
;
Litovsky and Yin, 1998a
,b
), suggest that precedence is almost certainly
the consequence of several mechanisms that act at a variety of levels
along the auditory pathway and that the relief from DNLL inhibition at
the ICc shown here may be but one of those mechanisms.
Precedence occurs in many animals
Mechanisms that suppress the localization of reverberations must
be under strong selective pressures because precedence is a
widespread, if not universal, feature of auditory systems.
Precedence has been found in insects (Wyttenbach and Hoy, 1993
), birds
(Keller and Takahashi, 1996
), and a variety of mammals including
rodents (Kelly, 1974
; Wickesberg and Oertel, 1990
), carnivores
(Cranford and Oberholtzer, 1976
; Yin, 1994
; Litovsky and Yin,
1998a
,b
), rabbits (Fitzpatrick et al., 1995
), and humans (Litovsky et
al., 1999
). We suggest that bats should be added to this list.
Bats have to cope extensively with acoustic reverberations in their
daily lives. The Mexican free-tailed bats used in this study, for
example, live in caves where they congregate in large colonies that
often number in the millions. They use a rich repertoire of
communication calls that they use for a wide variety of social interactions (Balcombe, 1990
; Balcombe and McCracken, 1992
; French and
Lollar, 2000
). Caves are highly reverberant, and in this environment precedence would facilitate the perception of communication signals from other bats by allowing the bat to localize the first sound received. Precedence would thus prevent the bat from perceiving each
reverberation as a separate sound with its own location, similar to the
way that precedence in humans prevents the potential confusion from the
multiple reflections in a reverberant room. Precedence might also be
advantageous for echolocation. While flying either in caves or among
the vegetation outside, orientation calls are emitted that are
reflected as echoes from objects ahead. The sound reflected from a
given object not only reflects directly back to the bat as a primary
echo but it also reflects or scatters in a variety of directions. The
sound scattered from the first object may then be reflected again, but
now from other objects, producing secondary, weaker echoes that are
also reflected back to the bat. Similar to the argument for
communication sounds, precedence could be advantageous in allowing the
bat to localize and focus on primary objects without the confusion that
would occur if each of the secondary echoes were perceived as separate targets with their own locations.
Concluding comments
Here we showed that both the excitation and persistent inhibition
in the DNLL are key factors that influence binaural processing in the
ICc. The significance of the DNLL innervation is to create an emergent
property in the ICc, a property that is not possessed by LSO neurons or
by IC cells that are not innervated by the DNLL. That property is a
change in the binaural responsiveness of the ICc cell, a change
produced by the reception of an earlier sound the IID of which is
strongly excitatory to the ICc cell. These features suggest that the
circuitry linking the DNLL with the contralateral ICc is important for
the processing of signals the IIDs of which change over time, such as
the IIDs that would be generated by moving stimuli or by multiple sound
sources that emanate from different regions of space.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Jan. 17, 2001; revised April 9, 2001; accepted April 9, 2001.
This work was supported by Grant RO1 DC 00268-16 from the the National
Institute on Deafness and Other Communicative Disorders, National
Institutes of Health. We thank Eric Bauer, Jane Lubischer, Jeff
Wenstrup, Achim Klug, Walt Wilczynski, and David Ryugo for their
comments and suggestions, Linslee Luke for her assistance with the
histology, and Carl Resler for technical support.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. George D. Pollak at the above
address. E-mail: gpollak{at}mail.utexas.edu.
R. M. Burger's present address: Virginia Merrill Bloedel Hearing
Research Center, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195-7923.
 |
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