Frequency-specific corticofugal modulation of the dorsal cochlear nucleus in mice

The primary auditory cortex (AI) modulates the sound information processing in the lemniscal subcortical nuclei, including the anteroventral cochlear nucleus, in a frequency-specific manner. The dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) is a non-lemniscal subcortical nucleus but it is tonotopically organized li...

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Main Authors: Lingzhi eKong, Colin eXiong, Liang eLi, Jun eYan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2014.00125/full
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spelling doaj-e9863331316a4befa6a75e689fb3f77e2020-11-25T00:04:59ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience1662-51372014-07-01810.3389/fnsys.2014.00125101968Frequency-specific corticofugal modulation of the dorsal cochlear nucleus in miceLingzhi eKong0Colin eXiong1Liang eLi2Jun eYan3University of CalgaryUniversity of CalgaryPeking UniversityUniversity of CalgaryThe primary auditory cortex (AI) modulates the sound information processing in the lemniscal subcortical nuclei, including the anteroventral cochlear nucleus, in a frequency-specific manner. The dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) is a non-lemniscal subcortical nucleus but it is tonotopically organized like the anteroventral cochlear nucleus. However, it remains unclear how the AI modulates the sound information processing in the DCN. This study examined the impact of focal electrical stimulation of AI on the auditory responses of the DCN neurons in mice. We found that the electrical stimulation induced significant changes in the best frequency (BF) of DCN neurons. The changes in the BFs were highly specific to the BF differences between the stimulated AI neurons and the recorded DCN neurons. The DCN BFs shifted higher when the AI BFs were higher than the DCN BFs and the DCN BFs shifted lower when the AI BFs were lower than the DCN BFs. The DCN BFs showed no change when the AI and DCN BFs were similar. Moreover, the BF shifts were linearly correlated to the BF differences. Thus, our data suggest that corticofugal modulation of the DCN is also highly specific to frequency information, similar to the corticofugal modulation of the anteroventral cochlear nucleus. The frequency-specificity of corticofugal modulation does not appear limited to the lemniscal ascending pathway.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2014.00125/fullnon-lemniscalprimary auditory cortexneural plasticitydorsal cochlear nucleusCorticofugal Modulationlemniscal
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lingzhi eKong
Colin eXiong
Liang eLi
Jun eYan
spellingShingle Lingzhi eKong
Colin eXiong
Liang eLi
Jun eYan
Frequency-specific corticofugal modulation of the dorsal cochlear nucleus in mice
Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
non-lemniscal
primary auditory cortex
neural plasticity
dorsal cochlear nucleus
Corticofugal Modulation
lemniscal
author_facet Lingzhi eKong
Colin eXiong
Liang eLi
Jun eYan
author_sort Lingzhi eKong
title Frequency-specific corticofugal modulation of the dorsal cochlear nucleus in mice
title_short Frequency-specific corticofugal modulation of the dorsal cochlear nucleus in mice
title_full Frequency-specific corticofugal modulation of the dorsal cochlear nucleus in mice
title_fullStr Frequency-specific corticofugal modulation of the dorsal cochlear nucleus in mice
title_full_unstemmed Frequency-specific corticofugal modulation of the dorsal cochlear nucleus in mice
title_sort frequency-specific corticofugal modulation of the dorsal cochlear nucleus in mice
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
issn 1662-5137
publishDate 2014-07-01
description The primary auditory cortex (AI) modulates the sound information processing in the lemniscal subcortical nuclei, including the anteroventral cochlear nucleus, in a frequency-specific manner. The dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) is a non-lemniscal subcortical nucleus but it is tonotopically organized like the anteroventral cochlear nucleus. However, it remains unclear how the AI modulates the sound information processing in the DCN. This study examined the impact of focal electrical stimulation of AI on the auditory responses of the DCN neurons in mice. We found that the electrical stimulation induced significant changes in the best frequency (BF) of DCN neurons. The changes in the BFs were highly specific to the BF differences between the stimulated AI neurons and the recorded DCN neurons. The DCN BFs shifted higher when the AI BFs were higher than the DCN BFs and the DCN BFs shifted lower when the AI BFs were lower than the DCN BFs. The DCN BFs showed no change when the AI and DCN BFs were similar. Moreover, the BF shifts were linearly correlated to the BF differences. Thus, our data suggest that corticofugal modulation of the DCN is also highly specific to frequency information, similar to the corticofugal modulation of the anteroventral cochlear nucleus. The frequency-specificity of corticofugal modulation does not appear limited to the lemniscal ascending pathway.
topic non-lemniscal
primary auditory cortex
neural plasticity
dorsal cochlear nucleus
Corticofugal Modulation
lemniscal
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2014.00125/full
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