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Mammalian octopus cells are direction selective to frequency sweeps by excitatory synaptic sequence detection.
Lu, Hsin-Wei; Smith, Philip H; Joris, Philip X.
Affiliation
  • Lu HW; Laboratory of Auditory Neurophysiology, University of Leuven, Leuven, 3000, Belgium.
  • Smith PH; Department of Neuroscience, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, 53505.
  • Joris PX; Laboratory of Auditory Neurophysiology, University of Leuven, Leuven, 3000, Belgium.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(44): e2203748119, 2022 11.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36279465
ABSTRACT
Octopus cells are remarkable projection neurons of the mammalian cochlear nucleus, with extremely fast membranes and wide-frequency tuning. They are considered prime examples of coincidence detectors but are poorly characterized in vivo. We discover that octopus cells are selective to frequency sweep direction, a feature that is absent in their auditory nerve inputs. In vivo intracellular recordings reveal that direction selectivity does not derive from across-frequency coincidence detection but hinges on the amplitudes and activation sequence of auditory nerve inputs tuned to clusters of hot spot frequencies. A simple biophysical octopus cell model excited with real nerve spike trains recreates direction selectivity through interaction of intrinsic membrane conductances with the activation sequence of clustered excitatory inputs. We conclude that octopus cells are sequence detectors, sensitive to temporal patterns across cochlear frequency channels. The detection of sequences rather than coincidences is a much simpler but powerful operation to extract temporal information.
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Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Cochlear Nucleus / Octopodiformes Type of study: Diagnostic_studies Limits: Animals Language: En Year: 2022 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Cochlear Nucleus / Octopodiformes Type of study: Diagnostic_studies Limits: Animals Language: En Year: 2022 Type: Article