Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated...

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Ear Manipulations Reveal Importance of Gravity Input for Orientation Development Karen Elliott Thompson University of Iowa

Transcript of Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated...

Page 1: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Ear Manipulations Reveal Importance of Gravity Input for Orientation Development

Karen Elliott Thompson

University of Iowa

Page 2: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

On Earth

• Gravity provides linear but not angular acceleration

• In Space, astronauts experience microgravity

GRAVITY

Image from http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/98/Aldrin_Apollo_11_original.jpg

Image from http://t.wallpaperweb.org/wallpaper/space/1280x1024/shuttle_99_2_1280.jpg

Page 3: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Microgravity

• ALL linear acceleration is associated with angular acceleration due to centrifugal forces acting on the inner ear

• Perceived as self-movement

Page 4: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Return to Gravity on Earth

• Gravity again provides linear but not angular acceleration

• Brain adds the perception of angular acceleration

• Body attempts to counter with motor and eye movements

• Results in difficulty walking, standing, and stabilizing gaze

GRAVITY

Page 5: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Goal

To understand how gravity shapes the nervous system to guide behavior

• Want to look at areas where synaptic plasticity in gravity perception occur

Page 6: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Gravity and Movement Perception • Linear Acceleration

– Utricle

– Saccule

• Angular Acceleration – Semicircular canals

Image from Kopecky et al., 2012

U

S

ac pc

hc

http://www.bthchiroonline.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/inner_ear.jpg

Page 7: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Neuronal Network

• The plasticity between gravity input and motor output

occurs in the vestibular nuclei – Eron et al.(2008) Adaptationof orientation vectors of otolith-related central vestibular neurons to

gravity. Journal of Neurophysiology 75: 1928-1932

Brain

Spinal Cord

Page 8: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Experiment:

• Manipulate the gravity sensor: the ear – Remove one ear

– Add one ear

• Determine how asymmetrical and mismatched gravity detection shapes behavior and nervous system – Swimming

– Sensory projections

– Target neuron

Image from: http://petra-aqua.com/gfx/foto/1954.jpg

http://www.shechterlab.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/frog-eggs.jpg

Page 9: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Transplantation Method

• Donor ear from a Xenopus embryo (stage 25-27) is transplanted to host, rostral to native ear

– Ear in native orientation

– Ear rotated by 90 degrees

1-eared animal 3-eared animal

Page 10: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Transplantation Method

• Donor ear from a Xenopus embryo (stage 25-27) is transplanted to host, rostral to native ear

– Ear in native orientation

– Ear rotated by 90 degrees

• Embryos allowed to grow until early tadpole (stage 46)

• Swimming monitored

Page 11: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Rationale

• Native orientation – Sensory epithelia

aligned – Respond the same to

a given stimulus

• Rotated by 90°

– Sensory epithelia not aligned

– Respond differently to a given stimulus

Page 12: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Transplantation Results

Ear Removed 3 Ears Normal 3 Ears Rotated Normal Rotated

Page 13: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Swimming was most affected when ear was removed or when 3rd ear was rotated

3 ears, all normal orientation 3 ears, one rotated 90°

1 ear 2 ears, Normal orientation

Page 14: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Afferent innervation depends upon orientation

Normal Orientation Rotated by 90°

Single z-series Images Single z-series Images

Animal A Animal B Animal C Animal D

• Lipophilic dye-soaked filter paper was injected into native (red) and transplanted ears (blue, false colored green)

• Brain removed and sensory

neurons were imaged with confocal microscope

• Single optical sections were

observed

Page 15: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Loss of input or gain of input affected dendritic branching of target neurons

• Dendritic development of brain neurons depends upon neuronal input – Loss of input (no ear) results in reduced branching – Gain of input (extra ear) results in increased branching

• Blocking afferent activity does not affect dendritic branching

(Goodman and Model, 1990), therefore branching is independent of the ear’s orientation

Page 16: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Proposed Mechanism

Normal Rotated

Page 17: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Testing the mechanism: Determine whether ear manipulations affect initial direction of movement

Page 18: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Conclusions

• Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming, similar to that of one-eared frogs.

• Partial overlap and segregation of sensory neurons implies that differential gravity sensation affects guidance of afferent axons in addition to molecular mechanisms.

• Altered sensory neuron input affects the dendritic branching of target neurons, such as the Mauthner cell.

Page 19: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Future Directions

• Alter gravity using a ‘frog elevator’

– Simulated parabolic flight

http://umps.med.univ-tours.fr/images/eng_parabole1.jpg

0g 2g 0g 2g

Page 20: Karen Elliott Thompson University of IowaConclusions •Sensory neurons of transplanted ears rotated 90° interfere with vestibular processing as indicated by the aberrant swimming,

Acknowledgements

• Bernd Fritzsch

• Israt Jahan

• Ning Pan

• Tian Yang

• Jennifer Kersigo

• Ryan Ries

• Jeremy Duncan

• Ben Kopecky

• Hannah Maher

• Alex Perk

• Dr. Douglas Houston

• Dr. James Buchholz

• Dr. Dan Weeks

• Funding – NASA base grant

– NIH

– Iowa Center for Molecular Auditory Neuroscience