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Golgi cells in the superficial granule cell domain overlying the ventral cochlear nucleus: Morphology and electrophysiology in slices

โœ Scribed by Ferragamo, Michael J.; Golding, Nace L.; Gardner, Stephanie M.; Oertel, Donata


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
299 KB
Volume
400
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9967

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โœฆ Synopsis


Golgi cells are poised to integrate multimodal influences by participating in circuits involving granule cells in the cochlear nuclei. To understand their physiological role, intracellular recordings were made from anatomically identified Golgi cells in slices of the cochlear nuclei from mice. Cell bodies, dendrites, and terminals for all seven labeled cells were restricted to the narrow plane of the superficial granule cell domain over the ventral cochlear nucleus. The axonal arborization was the most striking feature of all Golgi cells; a dense plexus of terminals covered an area 200-400 microm in diameter in the vicinity of the cell body and dendrites. Axonal beads often surrounded granule cell bodies, indicating that granule cells are probable targets. Cells had input resistances up to 130 M omega and fired regular, overshooting action potentials. Golgi cells probably receive auditory nerve input, because shocks to the cut end of the auditory nerve excited Golgi cells with excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs). The latency of EPSPs shortened to a minimum and the amplitude of EPSPs grew in several steps as the strength of shocks was increased. The minimum latency of EPSPs in Golgi cells was on average 1.3 milliseconds, 0.6 milliseconds longer than the minimum latencies of EPSPs in nearby octopus and T stellate cells. The long latency raises the possibility that Golgi cells receive input from slowly conducting, unmyelinated auditory nerve fibers. Golgi cells are also excited by interneurons with N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors, probably granule cells, because repetitive shocks and single shocks in the absence of extracellular Mg2+ evoked late EPSPs that were reversibly blocked by DL-2-amino-5-phosphono-valeric acid.


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