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  • Title: Optical mapping of neural responses and their gamma-aminobutyric acid-ergic inhibitory effects in the auditory brainstem of early postnatal mice.
    Author: Cai SP, Doi T, Jing S, Kaneko T, Yang SM, Asako M, Matsumoto-Ono A, Waka N, Yamashita T.
    Journal: Acta Otolaryngol Suppl; 2004 Aug; (553):43-9. PubMed ID: 15277035.
    Abstract:
    gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA)ergic neurons play important tropic and modulatory roles in the auditory pathway, especially in the early stage between postnatal Days 0 and 5. The effects of GABA and GABAa receptor antagonist were observed in this experimental study. Numerous histological and electrophysiological studies have been performed on the contribution of GABA to the auditory pathway; however, the spatio-temporal patterns of excitatory propagation and the relationships between GABA receptor and excitatory propagation have yet to be reported. Using an optical recording technique and a voltage-sensitive dye, the spatio-temporal patterns of excitatory propagation were observed in the auditory brainstem slices of early postnatal mice. A bath containing 50 microM GABA was applied, which largely inhibited the excitatory activities along the vestibulocochlear pathway. Bicuculline methiodide (BMI), a competitive antagonist against GABAa receptor, partially reversed the effects of GABA on the optical signals. Bath application of BMI alone helped to facilitate the depolarization course and its effect was apparent as an enlargement of the depolarized region from the cochlear nucleus and vestibular nucleus to some adjacent brainstem nuclei, as well as enhancing the amplitude of changes in the optical signals. The experimental results seem to suggest that GABAa receptors are widely distributed in an early postnatal auditory brainstem. GABA exhibited a greater modulating effect in the adjacent brainstem nuclei, which are involved in complex information processes, than that observed in the modulating primary auditory pathway. In the present experiment, significant GABAergic contributions to the optical recordings in the auditory brainstem were observed.
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