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Publication : EphB signaling regulates target innervation in the developing and deafferented auditory brainstem.

First Author  Nakamura PA Year  2012
Journal  Dev Neurobiol Volume  72
Issue  9 Pages  1243-55
PubMed ID  22021100 Mgi Jnum  J:241748
Mgi Id  MGI:5903575 Doi  10.1002/dneu.20990
Citation  Nakamura PA, et al. (2012) EphB signaling regulates target innervation in the developing and deafferented auditory brainstem. Dev Neurobiol 72(9):1243-55
abstractText  Precision in auditory brainstem connectivity underlies sound localization. Cochlear activity is transmitted to the ventral cochlear nucleus (VCN) in the mammalian brainstem via the auditory nerve. VCN globular bushy cells project to the contralateral medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB), where specialized axons terminals, the calyces of Held, encapsulate MNTB principal neurons. The VCN-MNTB pathway is an essential component of the circuitry used to compute interaural intensity differences that are used for localizing sounds. When input from one ear is removed during early postnatal development, auditory brainstem circuitry displays robust anatomical plasticity. The molecular mechanisms that control the development of auditory brainstem circuitry and the developmental plasticity of these pathways are poorly understood. In this study we examined the role of EphB signaling in the development of the VCN-MNTB projection and in the reorganization of this pathway after unilateral deafferentation. We found that EphB2 and EphB3 reverse signaling are critical for the normal development of the projection from VCN to MNTB, but that successful circuit assembly most likely relies upon the coordinated function of many EphB proteins. We have also found that ephrin-B reverse signaling repels induced projections to the ipsilateral MNTB after unilateral deafferentation, suggesting that similar mechanisms regulate these two processes.
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