A modiolar-pillar gradient in auditory-nerve dendritic length: A novel post-synaptic contribution to dynamic range?

Serhii Kostrikov, Jens Hjortkjaer, Torsten Dau, Gabriel Corfas, Leslie D. Liberman, M. Charles Liberman

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Auditory-nerve fibers (ANFs) from a given cochlear region can vary in threshold sensitivity by up to 60 dB, corresponding to a 1000-fold difference in stimulus level, although each fiber innervates a single inner hair cell (IHC) via a single synapse. ANFs with high-thresholds also have low spontaneous rates (SRs) and synapse on the side of the IHC closer to the modiolus, whereas the low-threshold, high-SR fibers synapse on the side closer to the pillar cells. Prior biophysical work has identified modiolar-pillar differences in both pre- and post-synaptic properties, but a comprehensive explanation for the wide range of sensitivities remains elusive. Here, in guinea pigs, we used immunostaining for several neuronal markers, including Caspr, a key protein in nodes of Ranvier, to reveal a novel modiolar-pillar gradient in the location of the first ANF heminodes, presumed to be the site of the spike generator, just outside the sensory epithelium. Along the cochlea, from apex to base, the unmyelinated terminal dendrites of modiolar ANFs were 2-4 times longer than those of pillar ANFs. This modiolar-pillar gradient in dendritic length, coupled with the 2-4 fold smaller caliber of modiolar dendrites seen in prior single-fiber labeling studies, suggests there could be a large difference in the number of length constants between the synapse and the spike initiation zone for low- vs high-SR fibers. The resultant differences in attenuation of post-synaptic potentials propagating along these unmyelinated dendrites could be a key contributor to the observed range of threshold sensitivities among ANFs.
Original languageEnglish
Article number109172
JournalHearing Research
Volume456
Number of pages11
ISSN0378-5955
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • Auditory nerve
  • Cochlea
  • Dynamic range
  • Spontaneous rate

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