Benson Thane E, Brown M Christian
Department of Otology and Laryngology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
J Assoc Res Otolaryngol. 2004 Jun;5(2):111-25. doi: 10.1007/s10162-003-4012-3.
Type II auditory nerve fibers, which provide the primary afferent innervation of outer hair cells of the cochlea, project thin fibers centrally and form synapses in the cochlear nucleus. We investigated the postsynaptic targets of these synapses, which are unknown. Using serial-section electron microscopy of fibers labeled with horseradish peroxidase, we examined the border of the granule-cell lamina in mice, an area of type II termination that receives branches having swellings with complex shapes. About 70% of the swellings examined with the electron microscope formed morphological synapses, which is a much higher value than found in previous studies of type II swellings in other parts of the cochlear nucleus. The high percentage of synapses enabled a number of postsynaptic targets to be identified. Most of the targets were small dendrites. Two of these dendrites were traced to their somata of origin, which were cochlear-nucleus "small cells" situated at the border of the granule-cell lamina. These cells did not appear to receive any terminals containing synaptic vesicles that were large and round, indicating a lack of input from type I auditory nerve fibers. Nor did type II swellings or targets participate in the synaptic glomeruli formed by mossy terminals and the dendrites of granule cells. Other type II synapses were axosomatic and their targets were large cells, which were presumed multipolar cells and one cell with characteristics of a globular bushy cell. These large cells almost certainly receive additional input from type I auditory nerve fibers, which provide the afferent innervation of the cochlear inner hair cells. A few type II postsynaptic targets-the two small cells as well as a large dendrite-received synapses that had accompanying postsynaptic bodies, a likely marker for synapses of medial olivocochlear branches. These targets thus probably receive convergent input from type II fibers and medial olivocochlear branches. The diverse nature of the type II targets and the examples of segregated convergence of other inputs illustrates the synaptic complexity of type II input to the cochlear nucleus.
II型听觉神经纤维为耳蜗外毛细胞提供主要的传入神经支配,其向中枢投射细纤维,并在耳蜗核中形成突触。我们研究了这些突触的突触后靶点,目前这些靶点尚不清楚。我们使用辣根过氧化物酶标记纤维的连续切片电子显微镜,检查了小鼠颗粒细胞层的边界,这是II型终末的一个区域,该区域接收具有复杂形状肿胀的分支。用电子显微镜检查的肿胀中约70%形成了形态学突触,这一数值远高于先前在耳蜗核其他部位对II型肿胀的研究中所发现的值。高比例的突触使得能够识别出许多突触后靶点。大多数靶点是小的树突。其中两个树突被追踪到它们的起源胞体,这些胞体是位于颗粒细胞层边界的耳蜗核“小细胞”。这些细胞似乎没有接收任何含有大而圆的突触小泡的终末,这表明缺乏来自I型听觉神经纤维的输入。II型肿胀或靶点也没有参与由苔藓状终末和颗粒细胞树突形成的突触小球。其他II型突触是轴体突触,其靶点是大细胞,推测为多极细胞和一个具有球形浓密细胞特征的细胞。这些大细胞几乎肯定会接收来自I型听觉神经纤维的额外输入,I型听觉神经纤维为耳蜗内毛细胞提供传入神经支配。一些II型突触后靶点——两个小细胞以及一个大树突——接收了伴有突触后小体的突触,突触后小体可能是内侧橄榄耳蜗分支突触的标志物。因此,这些靶点可能接收来自II型纤维和内侧橄榄耳蜗分支的汇聚输入。II型靶点的多样性以及其他输入的分离汇聚实例说明了II型输入到耳蜗核的突触复杂性。