Salvi Richard, Sun Wei, Ding Dalian, Chen Guang-Di, Lobarinas Edward, Wang Jian, Radziwon Kelly, Auerbach Benjamin D
Center for Hearing and Deafness, University at Buffalo Buffalo, NY, USA.
Callier Center, University of Texas at Dallas Dallas, TX, USA.
Front Neurosci. 2017 Jan 18;10:621. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2016.00621. eCollection 2016.
There are three times as many outer hair cells (OHC) as inner hair cells (IHC), yet IHC transmit virtually all acoustic information to the brain as they synapse with 90-95% of type I auditory nerve fibers. Here we review a comprehensive series of experiments aimed at determining how loss of the IHC/type I system affects hearing by selectively destroying these cells in chinchillas using the ototoxic anti-cancer agent carboplatin. Eliminating IHC/type I neurons has no effect on distortion product otoacoustic emission or the cochlear microphonic potential generated by OHC; however, it greatly reduces the summating potential produced by IHC and the compound action potential (CAP) generated by type I neurons. Remarkably, responses from remaining auditory nerve fibers maintain sharp tuning and low thresholds despite innervating regions of the cochlea with ~80% IHC loss. Moreover, chinchillas with large IHC lesions have surprisingly normal thresholds in quiet until IHC losses exceeded 80%, suggesting that only a few IHC are needed to detect sounds in quiet. However, behavioral thresholds in broadband noise are elevated significantly and tone-in-narrow band noise masking patterns exhibit greater remote masking. These results suggest the auditory system is able to compensate for considerable loss of IHC/type I neurons in quiet but not in difficult listening conditions. How does the auditory brain deal with the drastic loss of cochlear input? Recordings from the inferior colliculus found a relatively small decline in sound-evoked activity despite a large decrease in CAP amplitude after IHC lesion. Paradoxically, sound-evoked responses are generally larger than normal in the auditory cortex, indicative of increased central gain. This gain enhancement in the auditory cortex is associated with decreased GABA-mediated inhibition. These results suggest that when the neural output of the cochlea is reduced, the central auditory system compensates by turning up its gain so that weak signals once again become comfortably loud. While this gain enhancement is able to restore normal hearing under quiet conditions, it may not adequately compensate for peripheral dysfunction in more complex sound environments. In addition, excessive gain increases may convert recruitment into the debilitating condition known as hyperacusis.
外毛细胞(OHC)的数量是内毛细胞(IHC)的三倍,但内毛细胞与90 - 95%的I型听神经纤维形成突触,实际上将所有听觉信息传递给大脑。在这里,我们回顾了一系列全面的实验,旨在通过使用耳毒性抗癌药物卡铂选择性地破坏龙猫的这些细胞,来确定内毛细胞/I型系统的丧失如何影响听力。消除内毛细胞/I型神经元对畸变产物耳声发射或外毛细胞产生的耳蜗微音器电位没有影响;然而,它极大地降低了内毛细胞产生的总和电位以及I型神经元产生的复合动作电位(CAP)。值得注意的是,尽管耳蜗区域约80%的内毛细胞丧失,但剩余听神经纤维的反应仍保持尖锐的调谐和低阈值。此外,内毛细胞有大损伤的龙猫在安静环境中阈值出人意料地正常,直到内毛细胞损失超过80%,这表明在安静环境中检测声音只需要少数内毛细胞。然而,宽带噪声中的行为阈值显著升高,窄带噪声中的音调掩蔽模式表现出更大的远程掩蔽。这些结果表明,听觉系统能够在安静环境中补偿内毛细胞/I型神经元的大量损失,但在困难的聆听条件下则不能。听觉脑如何应对耳蜗输入的急剧损失?在下丘的记录发现,尽管内毛细胞损伤后CAP振幅大幅下降,但声音诱发活动的下降相对较小。矛盾的是,听觉皮层中的声音诱发反应通常比正常情况更大,表明中枢增益增加。听觉皮层中的这种增益增强与GABA介导的抑制作用降低有关。这些结果表明,当耳蜗的神经输出减少时,中枢听觉系统通过提高其增益来进行补偿,以便微弱的信号再次变得足够响亮。虽然这种增益增强能够在安静条件下恢复正常听力,但在更复杂的声音环境中可能无法充分补偿外周功能障碍。此外,过度的增益增加可能会将重振转化为称为听觉过敏的衰弱状况。