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Article ; Online: Neuronal morphology and synaptic input patterns of neurons in the intermediate nucleus of the lateral lemniscus of gerbils.

Wicke, Kathrin D / Oppe, Leon / Geese, Carla / Sternberg, Anna K / Felmy, Felix

Scientific reports

2023  Volume 13, Issue 1, Page(s) 14182

Abstract: The lateral lemniscus encompasses processing stages for binaural hearing, suppressing spurious frequencies and frequency integration. Within the lemniscal fibres three nuclei can be identified, termed after their location as dorsal, intermediate and ... ...

Abstract The lateral lemniscus encompasses processing stages for binaural hearing, suppressing spurious frequencies and frequency integration. Within the lemniscal fibres three nuclei can be identified, termed after their location as dorsal, intermediate and ventral nucleus of the lateral lemniscus (DNLL, INLL and VNLL). While the DNLL and VNLL have been functionally and anatomically characterized, less is known about INLL neurons. Here, we quantitatively describe the morphology, the cellular orientation and distribution of synaptic contact sites along dendrites in mature Mongolian gerbils. INLL neurons are largely non-inhibitory and morphologically heterogeneous with an overall perpendicular orientation regarding the lemniscal fibers. Dendritic ranges are heterogeneous and can extend beyond the nucleus border. INLL neurons receive VGluT1/2 containing glutamatergic and a mix of GABA- and glycinergic inputs distributed over the entire dendrite. Input counts suggest that numbers of excitatory exceed the inhibitory contact sites. Axonal projections indicate connectivity to ascending and descending auditory structures. Our data show that INLL neurons form a morphologically heterogeneous continuum and incoming auditory information is processed on thin dendrites of various length and biased to perpendicular orientation. Together with the different axonal projection patterns, this indicates that the INLL is a highly complex structure that might hold many unexplored auditory functions.
MeSH term(s) Animals ; Gerbillinae ; Neurons ; Cell Nucleus ; Auditory Pathways ; Axons
Language English
Publishing date 2023-08-30
Publishing country England
Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
ZDB-ID 2615211-3
ISSN 2045-2322 ; 2045-2322
ISSN (online) 2045-2322
ISSN 2045-2322
DOI 10.1038/s41598-023-41180-8
Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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