Back to Search Start Over

Auditory-nerve responses in mice with noise-induced cochlear synaptopathy.

Authors :
Suthakar, Kirupa
Liberman, M. Charles
Source :
Journal of Neurophysiology. Dec2021, Vol. 126 Issue 6, p2027-2038. 12p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Cochlear synaptopathy is the noise-induced or age-related loss of ribbon synapses between inner hair cells (IHCs) and auditorynerve fibers (ANFs), first reported in CBA/CaJ mice. Recordings from single ANFs in anesthetized, noise-exposed guinea pigs suggested that neurons with low spontaneous rates (SRs) and high thresholds are more vulnerable than low-threshold, high-SR fibers. However, there is extensive postexposure regeneration of ANFs in guinea pigs but not in mice. Here, we exposed CBA/ CaJ mice to octave-band noise and recorded sound-evoked and spontaneous activity from single ANFs at least 2 wk later. Confocal analysis of cochleae immunostained for pre- and postsynaptic markers confirmed the expected loss of 40%-50% of ANF synapses in the basal half of the cochlea; however, our data were not consistent with a selective loss of low-SR fibers. Rather they suggested a loss of both SR groups in synaptopathic regions. Single-fiber thresholds and frequency tuning recovered to pre-exposure levels; however, response to tone bursts showed increased peak and steady-state firing rates, as well as decreased jitter in first-spike latencies. This apparent gain-of-function increased the robustness of tone-burst responses in the presence of continuous masking noise. This study suggests that the nature of noise-induced synaptic damage varies between different species and that, in mouse, the noise-induced hyperexcitability seen in central auditory circuits is also observed at the level of the auditory nerve. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Noise-induced damage to synapses between inner hair cells and auditory-nerve fibers (ANFs) can occur without permanent hair cell damage, resulting in pathophysiology that "hides" behind normal thresholds. Prior single-fiber neurophysiology in guinea pig suggested that noise selectively targets high-threshold ANFs. Here, we show that the lingering pathophysiology differs in mouse, with both ANF groups affected and a paradoxical gain-of-function in surviving low-threshold fibers, including increased onset rate, decreased onset jitter, and reduced maskability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00223077
Volume :
126
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Neurophysiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154113822
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00342.2021