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Publication : Frequency-independent synaptic transmission supports a linear vestibular behavior.

First Author  Bagnall MW Year  2008
Journal  Neuron Volume  60
Issue  2 Pages  343-52
PubMed ID  18957225 Mgi Jnum  J:149870
Mgi Id  MGI:3849264 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2008.10.002
Citation  Bagnall MW, et al. (2008) Frequency-independent synaptic transmission supports a linear vestibular behavior. Neuron 60(2):343-52
abstractText  The vestibular system is responsible for transforming head motion into precise eye, head, and body movements that rapidly stabilize gaze and posture. How do central excitatory synapses mediate behavioral outputs accurately matched to sensory inputs over a wide dynamic range? Here we demonstrate that vestibular afferent synapses in vitro express frequency-independent transmission that spans their in vivo dynamic range (5-150 spikes/s). As a result, the synaptic charge transfer per unit time is linearly related to vestibular afferent activity in both projection and intrinsic neurons of the vestibular nuclei. Neither postsynaptic glutamate receptor desensitization nor saturation affect the relative amplitude or frequency-independence of steady-state transmission. Finally, we show that vestibular nucleus neurons can transduce synaptic inputs into linear changes in firing rate output without relying on one-to-one calyceal transmission. These data provide a physiological basis for the remarkable linearity of vestibular reflexes.
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