Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 12, 1575-1586, Copyright © 1992 by Society for Neuroscience
The phase and magnitude of hair cell receptor potentials and frequency tuning in the guinea pig cochlea
M Kossl and IJ Russell
School of Biological Sciences, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton, England.
Voltage responses to tones were recorded intracellularly from inner (IHC)
and outer (OHC) hair cells in the basal turn of the guinea pig cochlea.
Tone-evoked voltage responses were also recorded extracellularly from
fluid-filled spaces adjacent to the hair cells and from supporting cells.
The AC component of the OHC voltage responses to tones at frequencies
between 8 and 24 kHz and those recorded extracellularly were remarkably
similar with respect to phase as a function of sound level, but the
magnitude of the AC response was 2-10 times larger when recorded
intracellularly from an OHC. At frequencies more than half an octave below
the characteristic frequency (CF), the phase of OHC AC response was
independent of level, and the slope of the magnitude/level functions was 1
dB/db. At levels exceeding about 70 dB SPL, the slopes became less steep
and depolarizing IHC and OHC DC responses appeared. At frequencies one-half
an octave below CF and at frequencies between one-third and one-half an
octave above CF, notches were present in the AC/level function between
70-100 dB SPL that were accompanied by a sudden phase lag of -180 degrees.
These frequency- and level-dependent characteristics were also present in
relatively insensitive preparations and were attributed to a change in the
phase of OHC excitation due to level-dependent changes in the relative
stiffness of the mechanical components of the cochlear partition. At CF the
detection thresholds of the OHC AC response and IHC DC response and slopes
of the response/level functions were similar. At sound levels around 60 dB
SPL, the AC signal began to phase lead, amounting to approximately 90
degrees at 70 dB SPL. Within the same range of levels, the OHC DC
potentials first appeared and the IHC DC response began to saturate. At
frequencies just above the CF, the phase of the AC component increased with
level to a lead of about 180 degrees. OHC and IHC tuning curves are
comparable in the tip region, but they differ in that the low- and
high-frequency shoulders of the OHC AC tuning curves are more sensitive by
10-30 dB SPL. On the basis of the frequency- and level-dependent
characteristics of the IHC and OHC responses, it is proposed that OHC AC
potentials provide a measure of the phase and magnitude of the proposed
electromechanical feedback of the cochlear partition that enhance frequency
tuning in the cochlea.