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SAMPLE of the text
Kaltenbach
JA, Zhang J
Intense sound-induced plasticity in the dorsal cochlear nucleus of rats:
Evidence for cholinergic receptor upregulation.
Hear Res. 2007 Apr;226(1-2):232-43. Epub 2006 Aug 17.
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Wayne State University,
School of Medicine, Detroit, MI 48201, United States.
Previous studies in a number of species have demonstrated that spontaneous
activity in the dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) becomes elevated following
exposure to intense sound. This condition of hyperactivity has aroused
considerable interest because it may represent an important neural correlate
of tinnitus. There is some evidence that neurons in the superficial DCN,
such as cartwheel, stellate and fusiform cells, may contribute
to the level of hyperactivity induced by intense sound, although the relative
importance of these different cell types is unknown.
In the present study, we sought to determine the effect of intense sound
exposure on multiunit spontaneous activity both at the DCN surface and
in the fusiform cell layer and to examine the influence of cholinergic
input to DCN circuits on the level of activity in the fusiform cell layer.
Rats were studied in two groups, one of which had been exposed to a continuous
intense sound (10kHz 127dB SPL) for 4h while the other group served as
unexposed controls. Between 30 and 52 days post-exposure, recordings of
multiunit activity were performed at the DCN
surface as well as in the middle of the fusiform cell layer. Changes in
fusiform cell layer activity were also studied in response to superficial
applications of the cholinergic agonist, carbachol, either alone or following
pre-application of the cholinergic antagonist, atropine. The results demonstrated
that multiunit spontaneous activity in the rat DCN was generally much
higher in both control and exposed animals relative to that which has
been observed in other species. This activity was significantly higher
at the DCN surface of sound-exposed animals than that of controls. In
contrast, hyperactivity could not be demonstrated in the fusiform cell
layer of sound-exposed animals.
Carbachol administration most commonly caused suppression of fusiform
cell layer activity. However, this suppression was considerably stronger
in the DCN of sound-exposed animals than in controls. These findings suggest
that, hyperactivity at the DCN surface of exposed rats may arise as a
consequence of more highly activated neurons in the molecular layer, such
as cartwheel and/or stellate cells, and that the lack of hyperactivity
in the fusiform cell layer may be the result of inhibition of fusiform
cells by these inhibitory interneurons. Although this finding does not
rule out fusiform cells as possible sources of hyperactivity in other
species, or even in the rat after short post-exposure recovery periods,
the enhanced sensitivity of the fusiform cell layer to cholinergic stimulation
suggests that in the rat, at least after prolonged post-exposure recovery
periods, increased inhibition of activity in this layer by more superficially
located neurons may result from an upregulation of receptors for cholinergic
input. This pregulation may be greater in rats than in other species due
to the relatively heavy cholinergic input that exists in the cochlear
nucleus of this species.
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