Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6273141 | Neuroscience | 2015 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors (NMDA-Rs) are located at each synapse in the lower auditory pathway of mammals and avians. Characterized by a slow and long-lasting excitatory response upon glutamate activation, their existence in a sensory system biologically engineered for speed and precision seems counterintuitive. In this review we consider the diverse functions of NMDA-Rs. Their developmental regulation and unique subunit composition in the inner ear promote protective and neurotrophic roles following acute insult by regulating AMPA-R expression and assisting in the restoration of synaptic inputs. This contrasts with chronic damage where overactivation of NMDA-Rs is implicated in neuronal death. These functions are thought to be involved in auditory diseases, including noise-induced hearing loss, neural presbycusis, and tinnitus via aberrant excitation. A more traditional role emerges in the developing auditory brainstem, where NMDA-Rs are downregulated and switch subunit composition with maturation. Their biophysical properties also contribute to synaptic dynamics resembling long-term plasticity. At mature synapses they support reliable auditory processing by increasing the probability of action potential generation, regulating first-spike latency, and maintaining reliable action potential firing. Thus, NMDA-R functions in the lower auditory pathway are diverse, contributing to synaptic development, plasticity, temporal processing, and diseases.
Keywords
DCNexternal nucleus of the inferior colliculusICXAMPA-RDNLLNMDA-RmGluRMNTBSGNVCNLSOMSOγ-aminobutyric acidlong-term depressionIHClong-term potentiationLTPAuditory developmentlateral superior olivemedial superior oliveInner hair cellHearingLTDspiral ganglion neuronnucleus magnocellularisventral cochlear nucleusnucleus laminarismedial nucleus of the trapezoid bodydorsal nucleus of the lateral lemniscusdorsal cochlear nucleusGABAglutamateN-methyl-d-aspartate receptorN-Methyl-d-aspartate receptorsMetabotropic glutamate receptors
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Authors
J.T. Sanchez, S. Ghelani, S. Otto-Meyer,