Optogenetic cochlear stimulation evokes midbrain activity with near-physiological temporal fidelity

Authors

Koert E, Götz J, Albrecht N, Vavakou A, Wolf BJ, Moser T

Journal

BioRxiv

Citation

bioRxiv 2026.05.16.724905

Abstract

When hearing fails, stimulation of the auditory nerve by electrical cochlear implants (eCIs) partially restores hearing, with most eCI users achieving open speech understanding. However, the broad current spread from each electrode limits frequency coding and speech understanding in daily situations with background noise. Spatially confined optogenetic stimulation by future optical cochlear implants (oCIs) improves frequency coding but millisecond closing kinetics of channelrhodopsins (ChRs) might limit temporal coding. Here, we evaluated the utility of fast-closing f-Chrimson for processing temporal information in the auditory system of Mongolian gerbils. We recorded neural activity in the inferior colliculus evoked by f-Chrimson-mediated optogenetic stimulation of the cochlea. F-Chrimson enabled energy-efficient stimulation of the auditory pathway at rates ≥ 150 Hz, outperforming the slower ChR variants CatCh (blue) and ChReef (green). Energy thresholds for activation of the auditory pathway were in the low µJ range, between ChReef (sub-µJ) and CatCh. Dynamic range and frequency selectivity were comparable to previous observations with CatCh and outperformed electrical stimulation. In conclusion, employing fast-gating ChRs harnesses improved spectral coding without degrading temporal coding.

DOI

10.64898/2026.05.16.724905