Volume 21, Number 1
2011
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Vestibular signal processing by separate sets of neuronal
filters
Featured Article (1,605 KB)
pp. 5 - 19
Mathieu Beraneck, Hans Straka
Second-order vestibular neurons (2°VN) are the central element
for the transformation of body motion-related sensory signals
into extraocular motor commands for retinal image stabilization
during locomotion. The wide range of motion dynamics
necessitates sensory signal transformation in parallel,
frequency-tuned channels. Accordingly, in various vertebrates,
2°VN have been shown to form differently tuned functional
subgroups. In frog, these neurons subdivide into two separate
populations with distinctly different intrinsic membrane
properties, discharge dynamics and synaptic response
characteristics. Frog tonic 2°VN exhibit low-pass filter
characteristics and membrane properties that cause amplification
of synaptic inputs, whereas phasic 2°VN form band-pass filters
that allow frequency-dependent shunting of repetitive inputs.
The differential, yet complementary membrane properties render
tonic 2°VN particularly suitable for synaptic integration and
phasic 2°VN for differentiation and event detection.
Differential insertion of the two cell types into local circuits
reinforces the functional consequences of the intrinsic membrane
properties, respectively. As a consequence, the synergy of
cellular and network properties creates sets of neuronal
elements with particular filter characteristics that form
flexible, frequency-tuned components for optimal transformation
of all dynamic aspects of body motion-related multisensory
signals.
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