Topographic organization in the auditory brainstem of juvenile mice is disrupted in congenital deafness
Leao R.N., Sun H., Svahn K., Berntson A., Youssoufian M., Paolini A.G., Fyffe R.E.W., and Walmsley B.
There is an orderly topographic arrangement of neurones within auditory brainstem nuclei
based on sound frequency. Previous immunolabelling studies in the medial nucleus of
the trapezoid body (MNTB) have suggested that there may be gradients of voltage-gated
currents underlying this tonotopic arrangement. Here, our electrophysiological and immunolabelling
results demonstrate that underlying the tonotopic organization of the MNTB is a
combination of medio-lateral gradients of low-and high-threshold potassium currents and
hyperpolarization-activated cation currents. Our results also show that the intrinsic membrane
properties of MNTB neurones produce a topographic gradient of time delays, which may be
relevant to sound localization, following previous demonstrations of the importance of the
timing of inhibitory input from the MNTB to the medial superior olive (MSO). Most importantly,
we demonstrate that, in the MNTB of congenitally deaf mice, which exhibit no spontaneous
auditory nerve activity, the normal tonotopic gradients of neuronal properties are absent. Our
results suggest an underlying mechanism for the observed topographic gradient of neuronal
firing properties in the MNTB, show that an intrinsic neuronal mechanism is responsible for
generating a topographic gradient of time-delays, and provide direct evidence that these gradients
rely on spontaneous auditory nerve activity during development.