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Volume 17, Number 22,
Issue of November 15, 1997
pp. 8739-8748
Note: Due to an author's error affecting all time and frequency values, this
article
has been reprinted in its entirety. The corrected version can be
found here.
Mechanoelectrical Transduction and Adaptation in Hair Cells of
the Mouse Utricle, a Low-Frequency Vestibular Organ
Received June 27, 1997; revised Sept. 5, 1997; accepted Sept. 9, 1997.
Jeffrey R. Holt1,
David
P. Corey1, and
Ruth Anne Eatock2
1 Department of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School,
Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Howard
Hughes Medical Institute, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, and
2 The Bobby R. Alford Department of Otorhinolaryngology and
Communicative Sciences, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas
77030
Hair cells of inner ear organs sensitive to frequencies above 10 Hz
adapt to maintained hair bundle deflections at rates that reduce their
responses to lower frequencies. Mammalian vestibular organs detect head
movements at frequencies well below 10 Hz. We asked whether hair cells
of the mouse utricle adapt, and if so, whether the adaptation was
similar to that in higher frequency organs such as the frog
saccule.
Whole-cell transduction currents were recorded from hair cells in the
epithelium of the mouse utricle. Hair bundles were deflected by a fluid
jet or a stiff probe. The transduction currents evoked by step
deflections adapted over 10-100 msec. The mean operating range was 1.5 µm (deflection of the tip of the bundle), approximately threefold
larger than in frog saccule. Taller and more compact bundles of the
mouse utricle account for this difference. As in frog saccular hair
cells, adaptation shifted the current-deflection (I(X)) relation along the
deflection axis. These adaptive shifts had time constants of 10-20
msec and reached 60-80% of stimulus amplitude. The adaptive shift and
voltage-dependent bundle movement are consistent with the motor model
of adaptation. When the fluid jet was used, adaptation also broadened
the I(X) relation and reduced the
maximum current.
Adaptation attenuated the transduction currents evoked by sinusoidal
bundle deflections below 5 Hz, within the frequency range of the
utricle, but because it was incomplete, substantial responses remained.
Moreover, the adaptive shift mechanism preserves sensitivity even in
the presence of large stimuli that would otherwise saturate transduction.
Key words:
hair cell;
utricle;
mechanoelectrical transduction;
adaptation;
inner ear;
vestibular
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