4.8 Article

Molecular signatures define subtypes of auditory afferents with distinct peripheral projection patterns and physiological properties

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2217033120

Keywords

hearing; spiral ganglion neuron; hair cell; CreERT2; inner ear

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This study reveals three molecularly defined subtypes of type I SGNs using single-cell RNA sequencing technology, but the extent to which they correspond to physiological subtypes is unclear. Using genetically marked SGN subtypes, the researchers found that Lypd1-CreERT2 expressing SGNs have a low SR and preferentially innervate the IHC modiolar side, while Calb2-CreERT2 expressing SGNs have a wider range of SRs and preferentially innervate the IHC pillar side.
Type I spiral ganglion neurons (SGNs) are the auditory afferents that transmit sound information from cochlear inner hair cells (IHCs) to the brainstem. These afferents consist of physiological subtypes that differ in their spontaneous firing rate (SR), activation threshold, and dynamic range and have been described as low, medium, and high SR fibers. Lately, single-cell RNA sequencing experiments have revealed three molecularly defined type I SGN subtypes. The extent to which physiological type I SGN subtypes correspond to molecularly defined subtypes is unclear. To address this question, we have generated mouse lines expressing CreERT2 in SGN subtypes that allow for a physiological assessment of molecular subtypes. We show that Lypd1-CreERT2 expressing SGNs represent a well-defined group of neurons that preferentially innervate the IHC modiolar side and exhibit a narrow range of low SRs. In contrast, Calb2-CreERT2 expressing SGNs preferentially innervate the IHC pillar side and exhibit a wider range of SRs, thus suggesting that a strict stratification of all SGNs into three molecular subclasses is not obvious, at least not with the CreERT2 tools used here. Genetically marked neuronal subtypes refine their innervation specificity onto IHCs postnatally during the time when activity is required to refine their molecular phenotype. Type I SGNs thus consist of genetically defined subtypes with distinct physiological properties and innervation patterns. The molecular subtype-specific lines characterized here will provide important tools for investigating the role of the physiologically distinct type I SGNs in encoding sound signals.

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