The Journal of Neuroscience, August 13, 2003, 23(19):7438-7449
Previous Article
Topography of Interaural Temporal Disparity Coding in Projections of Medial Superior Olive to Inferior Colliculus
Douglas L. Oliver,
Gretchen E. Beckius,
Deborah C. Bishop,
William C. Loftus, and
Ranjan Batra
Department of Neuroscience, University of Connecticut Health Center,
Farmington, Connecticut 06030-3401
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Abstract
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Neurons in the medial superior olive encode interaural temporal disparity,
and their receptive fields indicate the location of a sound source in the
azimuthal plane. It is often assumed that the projections of these neurons
transmit the receptive field information about azimuth from point to point,
much like the projections of the retina to the brain transmit the position of
a visual stimulus. Yet this assumption has never been verified. Here, we use
physiological and anatomical methods to examine the projections of the medial
superior olive to the inferior colliculus for evidence of a spatial topography
that would support transmission of azimuthal receptive fields. The results
show that this projection does not follow a simple point-to-point
topographical map of receptive field location. Thus, the representation of
sound location along the azimuth in the inferior colliculus most likely relies
on a complex, nonlinear map.
Key words: auditory pathways; sound localization; binaural hearing; neural pathways; neuroanatomy methods; cat
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Introduction
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The pathway from the medial superior olive (MSO) to the inferior colliculus
(IC) conveys important information about the location of a sound in space. The
MSO is a primary site for the neural computation of interaural temporal
disparity (ITD) (Goldberg and Brown,
1969
; Yin and Chan,
1990
; Batra et al.,
1997a
,b
;
Brand et al., 2002
;
Cook et al., 2003
), the cue
for the position of low-frequency sounds in the horizontal or azimuthal
direction (Hafter and Trahiotis,
1997
).
The MSO may be spatially organized by ITD as a prerequisite for
topographical maps of azimuth in the higher auditory system. In the barn owl
and chicken, neurons in nucleus laminaris (the homolog of MSO) are arranged in
an orderly manner so that the ITD to which neurons are tuned increases along
one axis of the nucleus (Sullivan and
Konishi, 1986
; Carr and
Konishi, 1988
; Overholt et
al., 1992
). Whether a similar map of ITD is present in the
mammalian MSO is not so clear. Morphological evidence supports a delay line
mechanism that could result in a rostrocaudal gradient of the preferred ITD
(Smith et al., 1993
;
Beckius et al., 1999
). A rough
rostrocaudal map of ITD was found in this dimension, with neurons tuned to
ITDs near zero located rostrally and those tuned to ipsilateral delays located
caudally (Yin and Chan, 1990
).
If spatial mapping of ITD is an important feature of the neural system
subserving sound localization, then the ascending projections of the MSO
should be well organized. Point-to-point connections would efficiently convey
information from a map of ITD in MSO to a similar map in the IC, the major
auditory structure in the mammalian midbrain (see
Fig. 1). Such a map of azimuth
in the central nucleus of the IC (ICC) has been suggested in experiments using
free-field stimulation (Aitkin et al.,
1985
). A rough map of interaural sound level differences, the cue
for azimuth at high frequencies, has also been reported in the IC
(Irvine and Gago, 1990
). In
both the MSO and ICC, the ITD axis should be perpendicular to the frequency
axis; however, it is unknown whether a topographical projection from MSO
contributes to any map of space in the IC. In the present study, we used
binaural physiology and anatomical methods to test the hypothesis that a
rostrocaudal map of ITD receptive fields in MSO is transmitted to the ICC by
point-to-point projections.

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Figure 1. Experimental design and hypothesis. Interaural time differences (ITD) are
hypothesized to be topographically organized along a rostrocaudal axis of the
medial superior olive (MSO), within an isofrequency lamina. If so, the axons
from MSO neurons are predicted to project to single laminas in the central
nucleus of the inferior colliculus (IC) in a point-to-point manner. Injections
of different labeled dextrans were made by iontophoresis in the same
isofrequency plane to test this hypothesis. H, High frequency; L, low
frequency; D, dorsal; V, ventral.
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Materials and Methods
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Surgery
There were two groups of experiments. In the first, anterograde tracers
were injected into the right MSO, and in the second, retrograde tracers were
injected into the right IC. Experiments were performed on 19 adult cats
(Liberty Labs, Waverly, NY), and all procedures conformed to National
Institutes of Health guidelines and protocols approved by the Animal Care
Committee of the University of Connecticut Health Center. In all experiments,
the animal was anesthetized with a mixture of ketamine (33 mg/kg) and xylazine
(1 mg/kg), intubated, and then maintained in an areflexive state with a
mixture of isoflurane and medical grade oxygen. It was monitored for breathing
rate and reflexive state, maintained at 37°C with a water blanket, and
received intravenous saline or lactated Ringer's solution during the
procedure. The animal was placed in a double-walled sound attenuation chamber
(IAC, Bronx, NY) and held in a stereotaxic device (Kopf, Tujunga, CA) for the
MSO injections or in a custom head holder for the IC injections. For MSO
injections, a craniotomy was performed over the cerebellum. For IC injections,
a craniotomy was performed over the occipital cortex, and a small region of
cortex was aspirated to permit visualization of the IC. After the recording
and injections, the skin and muscles were sutured, the animal recovered in an
intensive care unit incubator at 37°C until fully awake, and children's
aspirin (40 mg) was administered immediately postoperatively as an analgesic.
All animals recovered from surgery without permanent neurological impairment
and were able to eat and drink normally.
Acoustic stimulation and recordings
In early experiments, acoustic stimuli were produced by a digital stimulus
system (Rhode, 1976
) under the
control of an LSI-11/73 computer (Digital Equipment, Nashua, NH). In later
experiments, acoustic stimuli were generated by a TDT System 2 (Tucker Davis
Technologies, Gainesville, FL) under the control of a PC computer. All sounds
were delivered by the same Beyer earphones (DT-48, Hicksville, NY) via sealed
enclosures. The sound delivery system was calibrated from 60 to 40,000 Hz. For
injections of anterograde tracers in MSO, sounds were delivered through the
hollow ear bars of the stereotaxic device, and calibration was performed at
the end of the ear bar with a 1/8 inch microphone (Brüel & Kjaer).
For injections of retrograde tracers in IC, tones were delivered through a
hollow tube in custom silicone ear molds (PER-FORM silicone ear impression
material) made for each individual cat, similar to those used in the
unanesthetized rabbit (Kuwada et al.,
1987
; Batra and Fitzpatrick,
1997
). The hollow tube incorporated a probe that extended
2
mm beyond the end of the tube. Calibrations were performed through this probe
using a 1/2 inch microphone (Brüel & Kjaer). These calibrations were
then corrected for the characteristic of the probe.
The spectral and ITD sensitivities of neurons and multiunit clusters at the
injection site were assessed in both the MSO and IC. Units were tested for
their best frequency (BF) with monaural and binaural pure tones. Sensitivity
of the units to ITD was measured with a binaural-beat stimulus
(Kuwada et al., 1979
;
Batra et al., 1997a
).
Low-frequency units (BF
2500 Hz) and some with high BF were stimulated
with pure tones in each ear that differed by 1 Hz. These stimuli produced a
continuous change in the interaural phase difference. In one case, a
low-frequency unit was tested with sinusoidally amplitude-modulated (SAM)
tones with the same modulation frequency at both ears but with carrier
frequencies that differed by 1 Hz. The sensitivity of high-frequency units (BF
>2500 Hz) to ITDs was tested with a stimulus that consisted of SAM tones to
either ear that had the same carrier frequency but modulation frequencies that
differed by 1 Hz (Batra et al.,
1997a
). SAM tones were modulated to a depth of 80%. Test stimuli
were 5100 msec in duration, but the first 100 msec was not analyzed. The best
ITD based on a composite response was calculated
(Yin and Kuwada, 1983
;
Kuwada et al., 1987
;
Batra et al., 1997a
). The
composite response was generated by averaging the responses at all frequencies
that displayed significant synchrony to the 1 Hz beat frequency (Rayleigh test
of uniformity; p < 0.001)
(Mardia and Jupp, 1999
).
Recordings were made with glass patch pipettes (2-20 µm tip, resistance
0.5-5 M
), and the same electrode was used for the injection. Electrodes
were advanced with a microdrive (Burleigh Inchworm, Fishers, NY) mounted on
the stereotaxic manipulator. For MSO injections, the electrode was initially
positioned according to stereotaxic coordinates. An appropriate location for
the IC or MSO injection was found by assessing neural responses to sound and
making repeated penetrations. Acoustically driven responses of single or
multiple units just above threshold were amplified with Dagan 2400
(Minneapolis, MN) and Princeton Applied Research (model 5113; Oak Ridge, TN)
amplifiers. Action potentials were monitored by ear or discriminated by a BAK
window discriminator and recorded with a unit event timer.
Injections
For injections of anterograde tracers in MSO, the electrodes were filled
with one of two solutions of dextran in normal saline (Molecular Probes,
Eugene, OR): (1) 10% tetramethyl-rhodamine (TMR) dextran (catalog #D-1817) or
(2) a mixture containing 10% each of biotinylated dextran (BDA) (catalog
#D-1956) and fluorescein-dextran (catalog #D-1820). Iontophoretic injections
were made using a 51413 Precision Current Source (Stoelting, Wood Dale, IL)
and currents of +2.0 to +3.5 µA(7sec pulses, 50% duty cycle, 5-23 min total
duration). For injections of retrograde tracers in IC, several types of
injection solutions were used, all mixed in normal saline: (1) 10% TMR
dextran; (2) 6% Fluorogold (FG) (Fluorochrome, Inc., Denver, CO); (3) a
mixture containing 3% FG and 5% BDA; (4) red latex microspheres (LumaFluor,
Inc., Naples, FL) diluted 1:1; and (5) green latex microspheres (LumaFluor;
1:1). Microsphere injections required electrodes with 30-40 µm tips and
pressure injections of 300-700 nl with a Picospritzer (General Valve,
Fairfield, NJ).
Histology
After 7-10 d survival, animals were deeply anesthetized with the
ketamine/xylazine mixture and killed by cardiac perfusion with 50 -75 ml of
washout (2% sucrose and 0.05% lidocaine in 0.12 M phosphate buffer,
pH 7.3-7.4) and 1000 ml of fixative (4% paraformaldehyde in 0.12 M
phosphate buffer). Most brains with MSO injections (11 of 14) were cut in the
frontal plane, and the remainder were cut in the horizontal plane
perpendicular to it. Brains with IC injections were cut in the frontal plane
(n = 4) or in the sagittal plane (n = 1). The tissue was cut
on a freezing microtome into 50-µm-thick sections, collected in 0.12
M phosphate buffer, and stored at 4°C. In general, the
histology for all experiments was designed to preserve the fluorescence of the
different tracers or to convert the tracer into permanent nonfluorescent
reaction products in alternate sections.
Fluorescent tracers
In cases with the MSO injections of dextran, every third section, beginning
with the first, was mounted onto slides and coverslipped with 10%
1,4-diazabicyclo (2.2.2) octane (Sigma) in glycerine and neutral phosphate
buffer. In most cases, sections were incubated first with Fluorescein Avidin
DCS (A-2011; Vector Labs) at 1:1600. The fluorescein-labeled avidin binds with
the BDA and adds to the signal emitted by the fluorescein-dextran. Fluorescent
sections containing retrogradely transported red or green latex microspheres
were dried onto subbed slides and coverslipped with Krystalon (64969/71; EM
Science, Gibbstown, NJ) because the microspheres dissolve in glycerin-based
mounting media.
Conversion of fluorescent tracers to permanent, nonfluorescent
reaction products
Every third section from MSO injection cases was used.
Step 1. To render the biotinylated dextran visible, free-floating
sections underwent avidin-biotin-HRP histochemistry
(Oliver et al., 1994
). After
20 min in 0.5% H202 in neutral phosphate buffer (0.12
M, pH 7.4) and rinses in buffered Triton X-100, sections were
incubated in the ABC complex (PK-4000; Vector Labs) overnight at 4°C in
the presence of 0.5 M NaCl. After rinses, sections were incubated
in diaminobenzidine (DAB) (D-5637; Sigma) with Co and Ni for 15 min and then
incubated in a fresh volume of the same DAB solution with 0.005%
H202 for 15 min. In many experiments, additional
sections received this same treatment (without step 2) and were used for Nissl
stains.
Step 2. Next, the sections underwent an immunohistochemical
reaction to render the TMR dextran permanently visible. After rinsing in
neutral buffer, sections were blocked in neutral buffered 10% horse serum
(Invitrogen; 16050-015) containing 0.1% Triton X-100 for 2 hr and then
incubated in anti-tetramethylrhodamine antisera made in rabbit (A-6397;
Molecular Probes), 1:12,000 dilution in the blocking solution and 0.15
M NaCl overnight at 4°C. After rinses in Triton X-100 buffer,
sections were incubated with an anti-rabbit, biotinylated secondary antisera
(Jackson 711-065-152), 1:800 dilution, for 4 hr at 25°C. After rinses in
Triton X-100 buffer, the sections were exposed to the ABC complex (PK-4000;
Vector) in the same buffer overnight at 4°C. Finally, the
avidin-biotin-HRP complex was revealed with a DAB reaction without nickel or
cobalt or, more often, a NovaRED reaction (SK-4800; Vector Labs), for 15 min.
The sections were mounted from phosphate buffer onto subbed slides and cleared
in Histoclear (HS-200; National Diagnostics) before coverslipping with
Permount (SP15-500; Fisher). Earlier cases were treated with the freeze-thaw
techniques to enhance immunostaining as outlined in Beckius et al.
(1999
), but this later proved
to be unnecessary.
To render fluorescent FG permanently visible in a nonfluorescent form, an
immunohistochemical method similar to that for anterograde transport of TMR
dextran (step 2) was used on every third section in IC injection cases. After
H202 treatment, buffer rinse, and blocking with horse
serum, the sections were incubated in a primary anti-FG antisera made in
rabbit (Chemicon AB153) 1:8000 overnight at 4°C. The same biotinylated
anti-rabbit antisera followed by ABC reaction was used as in step 2 above.
After the ABC reaction, a DAB incubation with nickel and cobalt was used, 4
min without H202 and 4 min with 0.0005%
H202.
Analysis
Microscopic analysis used low-magnification camera lucida drawings and
high-magnification analysis with computer-assisted microscope systems.
Low-magnification, camera lucida drawings (20x magnification) were made
with a Zeiss Axioskop microscope to show injection sites and dextran-filled
axons. The axons and cell bodies labeled with fluorescent markers were viewed
with epifluorescence microscopy [high numerical aperture (NA) x10/NA 0.5
or x25/NA 0.8 lenses], and microscopic data were collected with
Neurolucida software (Microbrightfield, Colchester, VT) and an E-3200 Gateway
computer. The microscopy system included a CCD video camera with gating
capability for low-light conditions (CCD-72, Dage MTI, Michigan City, MI), a
gating-integration controller (Instagator, model 105001, Dage MTI), a PC frame
grabber-VGA card (FlashPoint Intrigue Lite, Integral Technologies,
Indianapolis IN), a motorized stage controller (MC2000, Ludl Electronics
Products, Hawthorne, NY), and a shutter for the mercury lamp (D122; UniBlitz,
Vincent Associates, Rochester, NY). Data from nonfluorescent sections was
collected with bright-field optics on the same microscope system. Analysis of
the retrograde labeling in the MSO included three-dimensional (3D)
reconstructions made with the Neurolucida system and displayed as solids
(Solids Module, Microbrightfield, Inc.).
Axonal bouton densities in laminas of the IC were estimated to determine
whether there were rostrocaudal gradients. In each case, we selected the most
densely labeled lamina, and bouton counts in that lamina were made in serial
nonfluorescent sections. For cases cut in the frontal or transverse plane (see
Fig. 7A1), samples
were obtained in regularly spaced sections (every third or sixth section). For
the case cut in the horizontal plane (see
Fig. 7B), every sixth
horizontal section was sampled, and the lamina in each section was divided
into seven regions along its rostrocaudal extent. Bouton counts within the
individual samples were made with an optical fractionator (Stereo
Investigator, Microbrightfield, Inc.). All of the boutons in the center half
of the section thickness were counted within the sampled area. The number of
boutons in a count was doubled to estimate the number of boutons in the entire
section thickness. These complete reconstructions of all the boutons in the
sample volume produced more reliable counts than single optical dissector
planes within the section. This method conforms to stereological counting
methods (Sterio, 1984
;
Coggeshall and Lekan, 1996
)
because all boutons within the sample volume were counted (a serial
reconstruction), and the profiles at the edge were not counted twice.

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Figure 7. The density of boutons in single ICC laminas. A, In transverse
sections (A1), bouton counts were made from within a single lamina,
such as that shown in higher magnification to the right of the section. The
two types of dextran-labeled axons in this case are shown in gray and black.
The same lamina was identified and counted in each serial section. A counting
frame (A2) was moved down the middle of the lamina to control the
sampled area (the center of the rectangle in the higher magnification of the
lamina). Boutons that intersected with the two gray edges of the counting
frame were not included. B, Horizontal section showing the seven
sample areas along the lamina in each section. These same sample areas were
analyzed in each section and summed, and the sum corresponds to the bouton
density from a single section in the transverse plane. C1, Histograms
of bouton density in serial sections from three separate cases, each with its
MSO injection in a different rostrocaudal location. The peaks of maximum
bouton density are staggered in different sections along the rostrocaudal
dimension of the IC. C2, Bouton density in serial sections after two
injections in MSO at 1000 Hz BF at different rostrocaudal positions. Maximum
bouton density is at the rostral end of the IC for both injections.
C3, Bouton density in serial sections after two injections in MSO at
300 Hz BF at different rostrocaudal positions. Maximum bouton density from the
rostral MSO is in the middle of the IC, whereas the caudal injection has peaks
of high density rostrally and caudally in the IC.
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The boutons plotted in the previous step were used to assess bouton
gradients along the other axes perpendicular to the frequency axis (i.e., the
dorsal-ventral axis and "oblique" axes between the dorsoventral
and rostrocaudal axes). Three-dimensional serial reconstructions were made
that allowed the sampled boutons to be viewed as a three-dimensional plane or
contour, similar to the fibrodendritic lamina from which it was obtained. The
three-dimensional field of boutons was projected onto two dimensions by
rotating the contour until the planar surface was parallel to the viewing
window (see Fig. 8C),
and the differences in the Z coordinates were within the 200 µm
thickness of the lamina. The X and Y coordinates of the
markers at this orientation were then rendered as a two-dimensional scatter
plot (see Fig. 8 D).
To examine the density of boutons in the plane of the lamina, perpendicular to
the frequency axis, we rotated the field of bouton markers in 10°
increments. A histogram of bouton density perpendicular to the x-axis
with 150 -200 µm bins was generated at each angle of rotation.

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Figure 8. Measurements of bouton gradients along arbitrary axes perpendicular to the
frequency axis. A, Three-dimensional reconstruction of sampled
boutons in case 31 (BF 300 Hz). The sampled area in each section is enclosed
in a rectangle. B, Reconstructions of sampled boutons in case 85 (BF
1 kHz) and case 56 (BF 5 kHz). C, Case 31 after rotation so that the
surface of the lamina enclosing the boutons is parallel to the plane of view.
The viewing angle is indicated by the arrow in A. D, The
boutons in C have been flattened onto the x-y plane and
rotated so that the longest axis is parallel to the x-axis of the
graph. Only 300 TMR (black) and BDA (gray) randomly selected boutons terminals
are shown, and the BDA bouton terminals have been offset from the TMR
terminals by 3% to the right for the purpose of illustration. All bouton
terminals were included in the analyses shown in E-H.
E, The number of boutons, as a percentage of all the boutons of the
same type, are plotted as a function of x-axis position (E,
parallel to the long axis) and y-axis position (F,
perpendicular to the long axis). The same bin width is used in both
histograms. The distribution of boutons along other axes was also checked by
rotating the data in 10° steps and replotting the histograms (data not
shown). G, Bouton distribution in case 56, parallel to the longest
axis (plotted along the x-axis) and perpendicular to that plotted
along the y-axis. H, Bouton distribution in case 85.
C, Caudal; D, dorsal; M, medial; L, lateral; V, ventral.
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Results
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Injections of dextran into MSO
Because the goal of the study was to examine the topography of the
projection from the MSO to the IC (Fig.
1), we made small injections of dextran into the MSO that resulted
in axonal transport to the IC. The injections were confined to the MSO or
extended beyond the margins of the MSO, but they did not invade the lateral
superior olive (LSO). Figure 2
shows an injection of BDA mixed with fluorescein-dextran in the caudal MSO
(Fig. 2A) and an
injection of TMR dextran in the same MSO at the rostral end
(Fig. 2B). A single
injection from another case is shown in
Figure 2C, and its
location at the dorsal aspect of MSO can be discerned from the
cytoarchitecture of the superior olive in the adjacent Nissl-stained section
(Fig. 2D).

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Figure 2. Injections of dextran in MSO seen in transverse sections after conversion
to nonfluorescent reaction product. A, An injection of BDA in the
caudal MSO in case 31 at a BF of 300 Hz. B, An injection of TMR
dextran in rostral MSO in the same case as A. C, An
injection of BDA in dorsal MSO in case 55. D, A Nissl-stained section
adjacent to that in C showing the cytoarchitecture of MSO. LSO,
Lateral superior olivary nucleus. Scale bar, 200 µm.
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We identified the rostrocaudal position in the MSO of each injection site
and its BF. Most of the injection sites were in the rostral half of the MSO.
The locations of all injections are shown in
Figure 3A, which
depicts the MSO as a flat sheet, with low frequency at the top (dorsal in
vivo) and high frequency at the bottom of the y-axis (ventral
in vivo), whereas the rostrocaudal dimension of the MSO is the
x-axis. The center of each injection site is marked by a symbol, and
its rostrocaudal extent is indicated by the length of the corresponding bar.
The horizontal line on which each bar lies indicates the length of the MSO in
that animal. The BF at each injection site is represented by the vertical
position of the symbols. The BFs covered a broad range: 200 Hz to 9 kHz. In
two animals, two injections were made in the same MSO, and both injection
sites had similar best frequencies (300 Hz in case 31 and 1 kHz in case 33).
Eight injections were made at low frequencies (<2500 Hz). Of these, four
were made at a BF of
1 kHz. Four single injections were made at higher
frequency. In one animal, the injection site was very ventral and caudal in
MSO, and recordings were made at this site from two separate units with BFs of
5.3 and 9.2 kHz (Fig.
3A) (plotted at 5 kHz).

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Figure 3. Locations and physiological characteristics of injection sites in MSO.
A, Best frequencies and rostrocaudal locations of injection sites in
MSO. In some cases (triangles with X, stars), two injections matched in
frequency were made in the same MSO at two different rostrocaudal locations.
Note that recordings of best ITD were not available (NA, stars) at all
injection sites. B, Relationship of best ITD at injection site to the
rostrocaudal position in MSO. Positive ITDs indicate contralateral delays and
correspond to sounds emanating from the ipsilateral hemifield. Lines fit to
all data are similar to that of Yin and Chan
(1990 ) with units near zero
ITD tending to be more rostral. Closed symbols denote single-unit recordings;
open symbols are multiunit recordings.
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There was no clear relationship between the best ITD and the rostrocaudal
location of the injection sites in the MSO.
Figure 3B shows the
location of all injection sites along the rostrocaudal axis of the MSO
relative to the best ITD recorded at that site. (High-frequency units that
were sensitive to ITDs in envelopes are shown as squares.) The units at the
injection sites were excited by inputs to either ear and generally exhibited
ITD sensitivity similar to that seen in previous studies of the anesthetized
cat (Yin and Chan, 1990
).
Units had predominantly "peak-type" responses in that they
discharged maximally at the same ITD at all frequencies with which they were
tested. Most units in our sample were tuned to ITDs within the free-field
range of the cat (approximately ±325 µsec)
(Roth et al., 1980
), and most
characteristic delays (7 of 10) and best ITDs (11 of 12) were within this
range. Nevertheless, individual units recorded at different locations in the
same MSO could show responses at variance with the rough rostrocaudal gradient
of best ITD demonstrated by Yin and Chan
(1990
)
(Fig. 3B, regression
line). Recordings at BF 300 Hz (Figs.
2A,B,
3A, triangles with X)
are shown in Figure 4. Here,
the best ITD at the rostral site (Fig.
4, top) was -86 µsec, whereas at the more caudal site it was 94
µsec. As in the previous study, the best ITD of the recording did not
predict its location in the MSO.

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Figure 4. Neuronal recordings in the same MSO (case 31, BF 300 Hz) could be tuned to
ITDs running counter to the postulated ITD topography. A, Rostral MSO
single-unit recording (3 mm anterior to the caudal end of MSO). B,
Caudal MSO multiunit recording (1 mm from caudal end of MSO). Left panels,
Response as a function of ITD at different frequencies constructed from
responses to binaural-beat stimuli. Right panels, Composite delay curves
calculated by averaging the responses shown in the left panel. The best ITD is
the peak of the curve. TMR, Tetramethylrhodamine dextran; BDA, biotinylated
dextran amine.
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Termination pattern of MSO axons in IC
Axons that terminated in IC were distinguished by the presence of terminal
boutons (Fig. 5C,
micrographs 176 and inset 171'), that is, the swelling at the Node of
Ranvier or end of the axonal branch that indicates presynaptic specializations
and the location of synaptic contacts
(Oliver et al., 1995
). Only
axons with boutons are considered in this analysis. After the two injections
in the same MSO in case 31, the axons from each injection were labeled with a
different color and could be easily distinguished within the same section. In
fluorescent sections, axons labeled with TMR were red, whereas axons labeled
with the BDA-fluorescein dextran mixture were green
(Fig. 5C, micrograph
176). In nonfluorescent sections processed for immunocytochemistry, boutons
labeled with TMR were red, and those labeled with BDA were black
(Fig. 5C, micrograph
inset 171').

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Figure 5. MSO injections and laminar IC projections in case 31. A,
Transverse sections to show MSO injections at 300 Hz BF at two different
rostrocaudal positions. BDA injection (green, caudal); TMR dextran injection
(red, rostral). Higher numbered sections are at more rostral levels.
B, Transverse sections that show axons from MSO injections projecting
to central nucleus of IC (ICC). Axons from the rostral injection (red) overlap
those from the caudal injection (green), and both types are found throughout
the rostrocaudal extent of the central nucleus. C, Higher
magnification plots and micrographs show the boutons of axons labeled with the
two tracers. Bouton fields partially overlap. Boutons with the two colors are
easily distinguished in digital micrographs of the axons with fluorescent
labeling and after conversion of the dextran to nonfluorescent form. In
section 176, two digital, monochrome images of the same field were taken with
rhodamine and fluorescein filter sets and a x10/NA 0.5 lens, and then
combined to make a red-green-blue image. In section 171', boutons are
imaged with a color digital camera and x40/NA 1.3 lens. All images were
adjusted for color level, contrast, and brightness. BIC, Brachium of IC; CG,
central gray; CM, commissure of IC; CN, cochlear nucleus; DC, dorsal cortex;
LL, lateral lemniscus; MNTB, medial nucleus of the trapezoid body; RP, rostral
pole nucleus; SC, superior colliculus; VL, ventrolateral nucleus.
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Axons from a single point in MSO terminated along the entire rostrocaudal
extent of the laminas in the ICC. These terminal fields were continuous in the
rostrocaudal direction throughout the central nucleus
(Fig. 5B, ICC) and
stopped dorsally
0.5 mm short of the border with the dorsal cortex
(Fig. 5B, DC). Small
numbers of collaterals extended into the rostral pole nucleus
(Fig. 5B, section 195,
RP) at the level of the superior colliculus.
Inputs from two points in the MSO to the ICC overlapped along the
rostrocaudal dimension. In the case depicted in
Figure 5, two small injections
(Figs.
2A,B,5A,
sections 81 and 117) were made in the same MSO at the same BF (300 Hz).
TMR-labeled axons (red) from the rostral injection
(Fig. 5A, section 117)
overlapped fluorescein-dextran-labeled axons (green) from the caudal injection
(Fig. 5A, section 81)
in the dorsolateral corner of the central nucleus
(Fig. 5B). The zone of
overlap was at least 200 µm wide and was seen in all sections through the
central nucleus (Fig.
5C).
The labeling in the ICC from the two injections differed slightly in that
the TMR axons were located somewhat more ventromedially
(Fig. 5C, red axons,
sections 165-183). Although the most lateral of this labeling was continuous
rostrocaudally, separate bands of label were seen medially. The most medial
labeling consisted of narrow, 200 µm bands of labeled axons separated by
wider gaps. In contrast, the BDA-labeled axons from the caudal injection
(Fig. 5A, section 81)
were more dorsolateral in the central nucleus. The slight offset in the
labeling may have been a result of spread of the tracer in MSO to sections
coding somewhat different frequencies, although both injections were centered
at the same BF.
Another example of how a single point in MSO sends axons along the entire
rostrocaudal length of the ICC is shown in
Figure 6. This case also
compares the results of two injections made at different rostrocaudal
positions in the same MSO (Fig.
6A). Most axons terminated in a single lamina that can be
seen by reconstructing the entire IC in 3D and rotating the reconstruction
40° (Fig. 6B).
Because the sections in this case were cut in the horizontal plane (section
225, inset), the distribution of the axons along the laminas is seen as
labeling from caudolateral to rostromedial
(Fig. 6C, sections 219
-237) (the dorsal-most sections have the highest numbers). Each panel shows
the MSO projections in three adjacent sections that were processed with
different histological methods. In each section, terminals from both
injections contribute to labeling along the length of the lamina except in the
dorsal-most section, where blood vessels interrupt the lamina.

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Figure 6. MSO axons converge on a single ICC lamina in case 33. A,
Injections in MSO at two recording sites with 1000 Hz BF. B, Serial
3D reconstruction made from individual plots of sections through the IC. The
40° rotation around the y-axis shows the lamina in which the
axons terminate at its narrowest, on-edge view. Almost all of the labeling is
confined to this one lamina. C, Higher-magnification plots to show
the projections in the IC labeled from both MSO injection sites. Arrowheads
indicate the rostromedial end of the lamina. Each drawing shows the combined
labeling from three adjacent horizontal sections (no rotation) prepared with
different histological methods to reveal BDA, TMR, or BDA + TMR. Because of a
technical problem, the distinction of TMR from BDA in one section was not
definitive. This section designated "BDA + TMR" does not imply
that the same axons were labeled by both tracers. LTB, Lateral trapezoid
body.
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|
Distribution of synaptic boutons from MSO axons in ICC laminas
Point-to-point connections between MSO and IC isofrequency laminas appear
to be absent on the basis of results of the small MSO injections presented
above. If there is a gradient in the representation of ITD in the MSO
perpendicular to the frequency axis, however, it could be transmitted to the
IC effectively by a gradient in the density of the synapses, even if there are
no point-to-point connections. If such a gradient were present in the
rostrocaudal direction, for example, neurons in the caudal MSO might make a
higher density of synaptic contacts in the caudal part of the isofrequency
laminas in ICC, whereas rostral MSO neurons might terminate more densely in
the rostral IC. To examine this possibility, axonal boutons were counted in a
single lamina in the ICC of five animals
(Fig. 7). Electron microscopy
shows that boutons are the sites of synaptic contacts made by axons from MSO
(Oliver et al., 1995
). The
boutons can be identified clearly and analyzed at the light microscopic level
(Fig. 5C, sections
176, 171'). It was relatively easy to identify the same lamina in
sections cut in the transverse plane (Fig.
7A1) or horizontal plane
(Fig. 7B), and we
could compare the density of boutons in each sample. Boutons were counted in
the central 100 µm of the 200-µm-thick lamina
(Fig. 7A1, inset,
A2).
The first analysis was bouton density measured in serial sections through
the IC (Fig.
7C1-C3). Boutons were not distributed in a
consistent way. Because boutons were counted from the caudal-most section of
the IC, none of the samples revealed a systematic increase or decrease in the
bouton density that covaried with the rostrocaudal position of the injection
in the MSO (Fig. 7C1).
However, different points along a lamina received different amounts of input.
In the three cases shown in Figure
7C1, the maximum bouton density was located near the
middle of each of the ICC laminas, but the peaks are staggered along the
x-axis. Because these cases differed in the rostrocaudal length of
the IC lamina and the BF, this appearance may be a byproduct of laminas that
began at different positions relative to the caudal-most section through the
IC. More informative were the two cases in which two injections were made at
the same BF at different rostrocaudal positions in the MSO (Figs.
5,
6). Case 33
(Fig. 7C2) showed a
maximum bouton density at the rostral end of the ICC laminas for both
injections. Case 31 (Fig.
7C3) had the maximum density from rostral MSO in the
middle of the IC lamina, whereas the caudal injection had peaks of high
density rostrally and caudally in the ICC.
The second analysis of bouton density was made after a three-dimensional
reconstruction of the lamina from which the boutons were counted. Three cases
cut in the transverse plane are shown for comparison. In one case the BF was
300 Hz (Fig. 8A), and
in the other two cases the BFs were 1 and 5 kHz
(Fig. 8B) (cases 85
and 56, respectively). The boutons in a single lamina were rotated to
essentially a two-dimensional surface in the plane of the page
(Fig. 8C). In this
way, the density of the boutons could be observed along all possible axes
perpendicular to the frequency axis, i.e., the axis orthogonal to the
two-dimensional surface (Fig.
8D). In two-dimensional scatter plots of the boutons, it
was evident that the two inputs labeled in the same case were generally
coextensive in the lamina (Fig.
8D, black and gray spheres), and there was not a
systematic separation of inputs as has been seen in the projections of lateral
superior olive and dorsal cochlear nucleus to the same lamina
(Oliver et al., 1997
);
however, the density of the inputs was not homogeneous, and there were patches
of several hundred micrometers in diameter in which one input was more
prevalent than the other. There was little evidence for a linear gradient of
bouton density in any direction. When histograms of bouton density were made
at different angles of orientation, the density of boutons varied most
dramatically when it was measured parallel to the longest axis of the laminar
plane (Fig. 8E),
similarly equivalent to measurements made for the sectional analysis
(Fig. 7), and least
dramatically when perpendicular to the longest axis
(Fig. 8F). Other axes
were similar to one of these two extremes. The density of termination along
most axes showed one or more prominent peaks, but these were not related to
the location of the MSO injection (Fig.
8E,G,H).
What is clear from both the sectional and three-dimensional analysis is the
lack of a uniform bouton density or linear gradient along any dimension of the
ICC laminas. Moreover, the proportion of synaptic inputs from different parts
of MSO, as represented by boutons, varies almost randomly along a lamina and
in a way that was not systematically related to the location of the injection
within MSO.
Injections in IC and retrograde labeling of MSO neurons
The experiments above revealed little evidence for transmission of a
point-to-point map of azimuth from MSO to IC and suggested a divergence of
projections from MSO neurons. Some MSO neurons with axons projecting to an
entire IC lamina might be intermingled with neurons with axons that have more
restricted projections. In the case of this "mixed divergence," we
would predict that a focal injection of retrograde tracer in the IC might
produce denser labeling in some parts of the MSO than in others, and this
pattern might vary with the rostrocaudal position of the injection site. On
the other hand, if all axons diverged completely, we would expect a uniform
distribution of retrogradely labeled cells, and this pattern would not vary
dramatically with the rostrocaudal position of the IC injection.
The data from retrograde transport is consistent with MSO neurons that have
completely divergent projections. In all cases, labeled neurons were
distributed evenly along the rostrocaudal extent of MSO, regardless of the
location of the injection site in the IC. Injections of retrograde tracers
were made in the low-frequency IC and were relatively restricted in their
rostrocaudal spread along the laminas of the central nucleus
(Fig. 9). Two injections were
in the mid ICC at frequencies <400 Hz
(Fig. 9A,B, gray,
IC/Horizontal View), and the caudal part of the injection site was at the same
level as the caudal-most commissure of the IC. A third injection
(Fig. 9C, gray,
IC/Horizontal View) was in the rostral ICC at a similar BF (350 Hz). All three
injections produced a similar pattern of labeling in MSO
(Fig. 9A-C,
gray spheres in MSO/Lateral View) with labeled neurons at the dorsal edge of
MSO at all rostrocaudal levels. Injections at the same BF in the dorsal cortex
of IC rostrally (Fig.
9A, DC, black, in IC/Horizontal View) or caudal cortex
(Fig. 9B, CC, black,
in IC/Horizontal View) produced either no or few labeled cells
(Fig. 9B, black
spheres in MSO), respectively, at the same locations. In contrast, an
injection at 1000 Hz in rostral central nucleus
(Fig. 9C, black,
IC/Horizontal View) resulted in a continuous band of labeled cells just below
the labeled cells from the lower-frequency site
(Fig. 9C, black
spheres in MSO).

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Figure 9. Retrograde labeling in MSO after injections in IC. A, Injections
of green (gray) and red (black) latex microspheres in IC of case 66 and
retrograde transport to MSO. Stacks of frontal (transverse) sections show the
IC injection (left). A single section from the brainstem at the level of the
superior olive shows MSO (arrow). The 3D solids reconstruction of the
injection sites in the IC shows a horizontal view as seen from the dorsal
surface of the brain (top right). The IC is transparent so that the locations
of the injection sites can be seen. The 3D solids reconstruction of MSO shows
retrogradely labeled neurons (bottom right, gray spheres). The MSO in the
lateral view is rotated 45° around the rostrocaudal axis so that it
appears as a flat surface parallel to the page. This view of MSO is as if the
eye were at the location indicated by the arrow. B, Injections of
green (gray) and red (black) microspheres in frontal sections of case 7 and
retrogradely labeled neurons in MSO (gray and black spheres, respectively)
(details are in A). C, Injections of fluorogold (gray) at
350 Hz BF and redlatex microspheres (black) at 1k Hz BF. Stacks of sagittal
sections are at top left. Horizontal view of IC (right) and lateral view of
MSO (left bottom) show retrogradely labeled neurons in MSO (gray and black
spheres) as in A and B. D, Dorsal; R, rostral; L, lateral;
M, medial; V, ventral. Scale bars, 1 mm.
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The density of the labeled neurons along the rostrocaudal axis of MSO was
not obviously related to the location of the injection site. Although the two
cases at mid IC had nearly the same location, these small injections produced
small numbers of labeled cells in each section and with slightly fewer labeled
cells at the rostral end in one case and the caudal end in the other case
(Fig. 9A,B). The
somewhat larger injection in the rostral IC
(Fig. 9C, black)
produced a denser but nearly continuous band of labeled neurons. The most
obvious discontinuities in Figure
9C are related to the 3D reconstructions from sagittal
sections and not the location of the injection site.
 |
Discussion
|
|---|
The present results imply that a simple, linear system of fine-grain,
point-to-point connections does not convey a spatial map of ITD, or any other
stimulus parameter, from the MSO to the IC. Small groups of adjacent neurons
labeled with anterograde tracers send their axons along the entire length of
laminas in the central nucleus of the IC. Quantitative analysis of the boutons
from these axons shows that the synapses from these axons do not exhibit a
gradient in density related to their connections to the MSO. The arrangement
of retrogradely labeled neurons in MSO also supports the absence of a gradient
because points in the IC laminas receive convergent inputs from neurons that
are evenly distributed along the rostrocaudal extent of the MSO. These data
suggest that information about the azimuthal location of a sound source in the
IC does not depend on a simple map transmitted from the MSO.
Topography of ITD coding in MSO
Our data provide no support for the idea that the azimuth is encoded by MSO
neurons arranged rostrocaudally according to the best ITD, but they do not
rule out this possibility. Indeed, the recordings at injection sites indicate
that any topography that is present for ITD must be weak. Yin and Chan
(1990
) provided evidence for
such a topography by merging data from several animals. Although our sample of
recordings from low-frequency MSO neurons was weighted toward the rostral
half, the two widely separated recordings in the same MSO had best ITDs
inconsistent with the assumed topographical arrangement. Both the individual
and paired recordings suggest a large degree of variability even within the
same animal. In our study, some of the variability may have been caused by our
use of multiunit recordings, but similar variability is present in the data of
Yin and Chan (1990
). Some
neurons at a single rostrocaudal position had very different best ITDs, and
neurons with similar best ITDs were found at very different rostrocaudal
locations (Yin and Chan, 1990
,
their Fig. 13). Thus, any map of ITD in the MSO must be coarse, at best.
Coarse mapping of ITD in IC?
The present data suggest that the individual MSO axons terminate along the
entire rostrocaudal length of the fibrodendritic laminas in the central
nucleus of the IC rather than in discrete point-to-point connections. It is
unlikely that this rostrocaudally extensive projection to the ICC is caused by
the diffusion of tracer along the rostrocaudal axis of MSO because the present
injections were restricted in their rostrocaudal spread. Moreover, our results
are unlikely to be caused by fibers of passage in the injection sites.
Although we cannot absolutely rule out fibers of passage, their contribution
seems minimal. If fibers of passage were a problem, they should be seen in the
two cases with two injections in MSO. We would expect the rostral injections
to produce more labeling in the IC than the caudal injections because MSO
efferents run parallel to the nucleus to exit rostrally. Plus, axons with both
fluorescent labels should be observed but were not. A final argument that
minimizes the contribution of fibers of passage is that the results of the
anterograde experiments are fully consistent with the findings from retrograde
experiments.
Topographical maps relevant to ITD processing were not a focus of previous
anatomical studies of MSO projections to the IC. Early studies with lesion
methods (Van Noort, 1969
) and
retrograde methods (Roth et al.,
1978
; Adams, 1979
;
Brunso-Bechtold et al., 1981
;
Aitkin and Schuck, 1985
;
Maffi and Aitkin, 1987
)
emphasized the laterality of the projections and the convergence of inputs
from different sources. The tonotopic organization of these midbrain
projections was described in the cat and in nucleus laminaris of the barn owl
in studies using autoradiographic tracing methods
(Henkel and Spangler, 1983
;
Takahashi and Konishi, 1988
).
In these studies, there was extensive rostrocaudal labeling in IC; however,
those studies could not distinguish labeled axons from labeled synaptic
boutons, and the size of the injections relative to the size of the MSO or
nucleus laminaris was larger than in the present studies.
Despite rostrocaudally projecting axons along an isofrequency lamina, could
these axons convey a coarse map of ITD? One method to convey a coarse map from
different MSO sites would be a coarse shift in the entire projection to the
ICC that varies systematically from one site to another. Shifts in labeling
were not reported in previous studies of the cat (reference citations above),
but those studies did not specifically look for such a shift; however, a
rostrocaudal shift in the projections to IC was reported in the barn owl
(Takahashi and Konishi, 1988
).
Injections at different positions along the ITD axis were made in nucleus
laminaris in different owls. In the present data, reproducible shifts in the
boutons were not found in any dimensions of the ICC perpendicular to the
frequency axis; however, a coarse map of ITD could be conveyed by an uneven
distribution of synaptic inputs along a lamina. Our findings suggest that MSO
axons may distribute their synaptic inputs heterogeneously as they travel
along the ICC lamina.
The encoding of ITD in the IC
Our results make it unlikely that any map of ITD in the MSO is transmitted
by point-to-point topography to the IC. Thus, if there is a topographical
organization of stimulus azimuth in the IC, as suggested by free-field
recordings (Aitkin et al.,
1985
), it is not a reflection of a spatially mapped projection
from the MSO. The question therefore arises: how is ITD encoded in the IC? Two
broad systems are possible.
The first is that the IC encodes only an average ITD, signaling a sound in
the contralateral hemifield (McAlpine et
al., 2001
). The true ITD is decoded at a higher level by weighing
the relative activities of neurons in the left and right IC. In this view, the
pattern of innervation in IC reflects the averaging of ITD information from
the MSO of one side. Such averaging would not completely obliterate
sensitivity to ITD, because most neurons in the MSO are tuned to ITDs
corresponding to sounds in the contralateral hemifield; however, such a system
would predict tuning in the IC that is broader than that in the MSO. Exactly
the opposite has been reported: tuning to ITDs appears to be sharper in the IC
than in the MSO (Yin and Chan,
1990
; Fitzpatrick et al.,
1997
). Thus, the system appears to require encoding of ITDs on a
relatively fine scale.
An alternative possibility is that ITD could be encoded by groups of
neurons sensitive to particular ITDs, but these neurons may be organized in a
nonlinear map. Neurons with different best ITDs may be located in different
regions within a lamina in the ICC. Our finding that the MSO boutons are
distributed with an uneven density within a single lamina suggests that an ICC
neuron at one point in the lamina may receive a heavier input from one point
in MSO than from another. This would create ICC neurons with different ITDs
distributed almost randomly within a lamina.
ITD-sensitive inputs from other sources might converge with MSO inputs to
contribute to an irregular spatial distribution of ITD sensitivity in ICC.
Both anatomical (Oliver, 2000
)
and physiological (Stanford et al.,
1992
; Batra et al.,
1993
; McAlpine et al.,
1998
) data support convergence in the IC. Neurons sensitive to
ITDs are present in the LSO (Finlayson and
Caspary, 1991
; Joris and Yin,
1995
; Batra et al.,
1997a
,b
)
and in the dorsal nucleus of the lateral lemniscus (DNLL)
(Brugge et al., 1970
), and
both of these nuclei project to the IC where they may converge with the inputs
from the MSO. Because the ipsilateral LSO and DNLL provide inhibition to the
IC and may terminate on separate parts of a lamina
(Oliver, 2000
), the particular
pattern of convergence may produce zones with different functionality and a
nonlinear, distributed arrangement of ITD sensitivity.
Cellular mechanisms are also likely to shape the network that codes sound
location in the IC. There is a heterogeneous population of neurons in the IC
(Peruzzi et al., 2000
;
Sivaramakrishnan and Oliver,
2001
), some of which may receive more MSO inputs than others.
Local interconnections within the IC
(Oliver and Morest, 1984
;
Oliver et al., 1991
) may be
important to combine ITD, interaural level, and spectral information. Most
exciting is the recent discovery that IC neurons show long-term potentiation
(Wu et al., 2002
) and
plasticity (Ma and Suga,
2001
). This suggests that local synaptic mechanisms may be
involved in coding sound location in the ICC.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Received Apr. 2, 2003;
revised Jun. 24, 2003;
accepted Jun. 24, 2003.
This work was sponsored by National Institutes of Health (NIH) Grant
R01-DC00189 (D.L.O.), National Science Foundation Grant IBN-9807872 (R.B.),
NIH Grant F32-DC05737-01 (W.C.L.), and NIH Grant T32-DC00025 (W.C.L.).
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Douglas L. Oliver, Department of
Neuroscience, University of Connecticut Health Center, 263 Farmington Avenue,
Farmington, CT 06030-3401. E-mail:
doliver{at}neuron.uchc.edu.
G. E. Beckius's present address: MS 8220-2238, Discovery Microscopy
Laboratory, Pfizer Inc., Groton, CT 06340. R. Batra's present address:
Department of Anatomy, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, MS
39216-4505.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/237438-12$15.00/0
 |
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