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Spatiotemporal pattern of action potential firing in developing inner hair cells of the mouse cochlea.


ABSTRACT: Inner hair cells (IHCs) are the primary transducer for sound encoding in the cochlea. In contrast to the graded receptor potential of adult IHCs, immature hair cells fire spontaneous calcium action potentials during the first postnatal week. This spiking activity has been proposed to shape the tonotopic map along the ascending auditory pathway. Using perforated patch-clamp recordings, we show that developing IHCs fire spontaneous bursts of action potentials and that this pattern is indistinguishable along the basoapical gradient of the developing cochlea. In both apical and basal IHCs, the spiking behavior undergoes developmental changes, where the bursts of action potential tend to occur at a regular time interval and have a similar length toward the end of the first postnatal week. Although disruption of purinergic signaling does not interfere with the action potential firing pattern, pharmacological ablation of the ?9?10 nicotinic receptor elicits an increase in the discharge rate. We therefore suggest that in addition to carrying place information to the ascending auditory nuclei, the IHCs firing pattern controlled by the ?9?10 receptor conveys a temporal signature of the cochlear development.

SUBMITTER: Sendin G 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3918831 | biostudies-other | 2014 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Spatiotemporal pattern of action potential firing in developing inner hair cells of the mouse cochlea.

Sendin Gaston G   Bourien Jérôme J   Rassendren François F   Puel Jean-Luc JL   Nouvian Régis R  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20140115 5


Inner hair cells (IHCs) are the primary transducer for sound encoding in the cochlea. In contrast to the graded receptor potential of adult IHCs, immature hair cells fire spontaneous calcium action potentials during the first postnatal week. This spiking activity has been proposed to shape the tonotopic map along the ascending auditory pathway. Using perforated patch-clamp recordings, we show that developing IHCs fire spontaneous bursts of action potentials and that this pattern is indistinguish  ...[more]

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