4.7 Article

Outer Hair Cell Glutamate Signaling through Type II Spiral Ganglion Afferents Activates Neurons in the Cochlear Nucleus in Response to Nondamaging Sounds

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 41, Issue 13, Pages 2930-2943

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0619-20.2021

Keywords

cochlear nucleus; glutamate signaling; granule cells; outer hair cells; Type II spiral ganglion neurons

Categories

Funding

  1. Hearing for Health Research Foundation
  2. Pennsylvania Lion's Hearing Research Foundation
  3. Department of Neurobiology Startup Funds
  4. National Institutes of Health [T32 DC011499, F32 DC013207, DC013048]
  5. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, Division of Intramural Research [Z01 DC000091-01]
  6. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders [DC004199]

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The study reveals that cochlear outer hair cells, unlike inner hair cells, are capable of releasing glutamate and activating neurons in the cochlear nucleus at moderate sound levels.
Cochlear outer hair cells (OHCs) are known to uniquely participate in auditory processing through their electromotility, and like inner hair cells, are also capable of releasing vesicular glutamate onto spiral ganglion (SG) neurons: in this case, onto the sparse Type II SG neurons. However, unlike glutamate signaling at the inner hair cell-Type I SG neuron synapse, which is robust across a wide spectrum of sound intensities, glutamate signaling at the OHC-Type II SG neuron synapse is weaker and has been hypothesized to occur only at intense, possibly damaging sound levels. Here, we tested the ability of the OHC-Type II SG pathway to signal to the brain in response to moderate, nondamaging sound (80 dB SPL) as well as to intense sound (115 dB SPL). First, we determined the VGluTs associated with OHC signaling and then confirmed the loss of glutamatergic synaptic transmission from OHCs to Type II SG neurons in KO mice using dendritic patch-clamp recordings. Next, we generated genetic mouse lines in which vesicular glutamate release occurs selectively from OHCs, and then assessed c-Fos expression in the cochlear nucleus in response to sound. From these analyses, we show, for the first time, that glutamatergic signaling at the OHC-Type II SG neuron synapse is capable of activating cochlear nucleus neurons, even at moderate sound levels.

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