“…However, this possibility seems rather unlikely due to the following arguments: First, the pattern of spontaneous activity in the MNTB of WT mice (Figure 1) is strikingly similar to the activity of MNTB neurons in rats where it closely resembles the spike pattern of spiral ganglion cells (Tritsch et al, 2010), indicating a faithful transmission of spikes from the auditory nerve to the MNTB even at the young ages examined. Secondly, nicotinic α9 AChR subunits are not expressed in the brain and, within the auditory system, are expressed only in the cochlea (Allen Developing Mouse Brain Atlas; Elgoyhen et al, 1994; Zuo et al, 1999) arguing against altered cholinergic transmission at CN neurons (Brown et al, 1988; Brown and Vetter, 2009; Fujino and Oertel, 2001) in α9 KO mice. Third, glutamate sensitivity and glutamate-elicited spike patterns of MNTB neurons in α9 KO mice were normal (Figure S2), as well as its afferent pathways (Figure 9).…”