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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 3 September 2002, pp. 1252-1262
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853
Weeg, Matthew S. and
Andrew H. Bass.
Frequency Response Properties of Lateral Line Superficial
Neuromasts in a Vocal Fish, With Evidence for Acoustic Sensitivity. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 1252-1262, 2002. The
mechanosensory lateral line of fish is a hair cell based sensory system
that detects water motion using canal and superficial neuromasts. The
trunk lateral line of the plainfin midshipman fish, Porichthys
notatus, only has superficial neuromasts. The posterior lateral
line nerve (PLLn) therefore innervates trunk superficial neuromasts
exclusively and provides the opportunity to investigate the
physiological responses of these receptors without the confounding
influence of canal organs. We recorded single-unit activity from PLLn
primary afferents in response to a vibrating sphere stimulus calibrated
to produce an equal velocity across frequencies. Threshold tuning,
isovelocity, and input/output curves were constructed using spike rate
and vector strength, a measure of phase locking of spike times to the
stimulus waveform. All units responded maximally to frequencies of
20-50 Hz. Units were classified as low-pass, band-pass, broadly tuned,
or complex based on the shapes of tuning and isovelocity curves between
20 and 100 Hz. A 100 Hz stimulus caused an increase in spike rate in
almost 50%, and significant synchronization in >80%, of all units.
Midshipman vocalizations contain significant energy at and below 100 Hz, so these results demonstrate that the midshipman peripheral lateral
line system can encode these acoustic signals. These results provide
the first direct demonstration that units innervating superficial
neuromasts in a teleost fish have heterogeneous frequency response
properties, including an upper range of sensitivity that overlaps
spectral peaks of behaviorally relevant acoustic stimuli.
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M. S. Weeg, B. R. Land, and A. H. Bass Vocal Pathways Modulate Efferent Neurons to the Inner Ear and Lateral Line J. Neurosci., June 22, 2005; 25(25): 5967 - 5974. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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