Literature DB >> 27121584

Auditory Golgi cells are interconnected predominantly by electrical synapses.

Daniel B Yaeger1, Laurence O Trussell2.   

Abstract

The mossy fiber-granule cell-parallel fiber system conveys proprioceptive and corollary discharge information to principal cells in cerebellum-like systems. In the dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN), Golgi cells inhibit granule cells and thus regulate information transfer along the mossy fiber-granule cell-parallel fiber pathway. Whereas excitatory synaptic inputs to Golgi cells are well understood, inhibitory and electrical synaptic inputs to Golgi cells have not been examined. Using paired recordings in a mouse brain slice preparation, we find that Golgi cells of the cochlear nucleus reliably form electrical synapses onto one another. Golgi cells were only rarely electrically coupled to superficial stellate cells, which form a separate network of electrically coupled interneurons in the DCN. Spikelets had a biphasic effect on the excitability of postjunctional Golgi cells, with a brief excitatory phase and a prolonged inhibitory phase due to the propagation of the prejunctional afterhyperpolarization through gap junctions. Golgi cells and stellate cells made weak inhibitory chemical synapses onto Golgi cells with low probability. Electrical synapses are therefore the predominant form of synaptic communication between auditory Golgi cells. We propose that electrical synapses between Golgi cells may function to regulate the synchrony of Golgi cell firing when electrically coupled Golgi cells receive temporally correlated excitatory synaptic input.
Copyright © 2016 the American Physiological Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  auditory system; brain stem; cerebellum; inhibition

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27121584      PMCID: PMC4978786          DOI: 10.1152/jn.01108.2015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


  70 in total

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6.  Identification of an inhibitory circuit that regulates cerebellar Golgi cell activity.

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7.  Spike transmission and synchrony detection in networks of GABAergic interneurons.

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10.  A novel inhibitory nucleo-cortical circuit controls cerebellar Golgi cell activity.

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  7 in total

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5.  Descending Axonal Projections from the Inferior Colliculus Target Nearly All Excitatory and Inhibitory Cell Types of the Dorsal Cochlear Nucleus.

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6.  Distinct Correlation Structure Supporting a Rate-Code for Sound Localization in the Owl's Auditory Forebrain.

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Review 7.  Function and Plasticity of Electrical Synapses in the Mammalian Brain: Role of Non-Junctional Mechanisms.

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  7 in total

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