We examined the effect of neonatal sensorineural hearing loss on synaptic density in the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICC) of adult cats to evaluate the role of auditory experience in synaptogenesis. Three groups of animals were used: bilaterally deafened, unilaterally deafened and normal hearing controls. Synaptic density in bilaterally deafened animals was significantly lower than in normal hearing animals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe onset of hearing in anesthetized South American opossums (Monodelphis domestica) was determined by the measurement of evoked potentials to click stimuli from the vertex of the skull immediately over the inferior colliculus. Evoked potentials were first recorded at postnatal day 24 at a threshold of 83 dB SPL; thresholds declined over subsequent weeks to below 58 dB at 40 days. Isolation calls emitted by the pups had stereotypic spectra with peaks at near 13 kHz and an octave higher.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe time course of synaptogenesis and the arrival and myelination of afferent connections were studied in the developing inferior colliculus (IC) of a marsupial, the Northern Quoll, and related to the onset of hearing and patency of peripheral auditory structures in that species. The quoll is born after 3 weeks of intrauterine growth and completes its development in a pouch for a further 80 days before weaning. Synaptic terminals in the IC at 9 days after arrival in the pouch were extremely rare and were associated with very low vesicle numbers.
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