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Volume 16, Number 18,
Issue of September 15, 1996
pp. 5629-5643
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Rapid, Active Hair Bundle Movements in Hair Cells from the
Bullfrog's Sacculus
Michael E. Benser,
Robert E. Marquis, and
A. J. Hudspeth
Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Laboratory of Sensory
Neuroscience, The Rockefeller University, New York, New York
10021
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Hair bundles, the mechanically sensitive organelles of hair cells
in the auditory and vestibular systems, are elastic structures that are
deflected by sound or acceleration. To examine rapid mechanical events
associated with mechanoelectrical transduction, we stimulated
individual hair bundles with flexible glass fibers and measured their
responses with a temporal resolution of 400 µsec. When a hair bundle
from the bullfrog's sacculus was abruptly deflected in the positive
direction, the bundle's motion in the direction of stimulation was
interrupted within the initial few milliseconds by an active movement,
or twitch. This response was biphasic, with an initial component in the
direction of the stimulus and a second component in the opposite
direction. The amplitude and duration of the twitch depended on the
bundle's initial position and the size and rise time of the stimulus;
the twitch was largest over the range of bundle deflections in which
transduction was most sensitive. Under displacement clamp conditions,
in which a hair bundle's position was changed and then held constant
with negative feedback, the twitch manifested itself as a biphasic
force exerted by the bundle. Some hair bundles produced twitches in
response to negatively directed stimuli, exhibited stimulus-evoked
damped oscillations, or twitched spontaneously. The hair bundle's
ability to perform work against an external load and to oscillate in
response to stimulation indicates that the bundle could supply feedback
for mechanical amplification in vertebrate auditory organs.
Key words:
auditory system;
frog;
hair bundle;
hair cell;
ion channel;
mechanics;
mechanoelectrical transduction;
myosin;
vestibular system
INTRODUCTION
The detection of sound and acceleration rests on
mechanoelectrical transduction by hair cells, the receptors of the
vertebrate auditory and vestibular systems. The hair cell's
mechanically sensitive organelle is the hair bundle, which comprises
tens to hundreds of actin-filled rods, the stereocilia, and a single
true cilium, the kinocilium, standing in ranks of progressively
increasing height. A hair cell is stimulated when this elastic bundle
is deflected toward its tall edge (for review, see Hudspeth, 1989 ).
With the hair bundle in its resting position, ~15% of a cell's 100 or so transduction channels are open. Movement of the bundle in the
positive direction, toward its tall edge, opens additional channels;
negative stimulation, by contrast, closes a portion of the channels
open at rest. The small latency of mechanoelectrical transduction
indicates that the channels are directly gated by mechanical force
(Corey and Hudspeth, 1979 ); the gating springs that control channel
opening (Corey and Hudspeth, 1983 ) are probably tip links, filaments
connecting adjacent stereocilia near their tips (Pickles et al., 1984 ).
Prolonged bundle deflection elicits adaptation, a process in which the
transduction channels' open probability returns toward its resting
level (Eatock et al., 1987 ).
The mechanical properties of hair bundles have been extensively
characterized by measuring bundle motion in response to forces applied
by flexible glass fibers of calibrated stiffness. In addition to their
passive stiffnesses (for review, see Howard et al., 1988 ), bundles
display mechanical responses associated with channel gating (Howard and
Hudspeth, 1988 ) and adaptation (Howard and Hudspeth, 1987a ). Moreover,
a limited number of observations indicate that hair bundles are capable
of other motile responses. Spontaneous hair bundle movements include
components too large to stem from Brownian motion; in addition, abrupt
displacements can evoke bundle oscillations (Crawford and Fettiplace,
1985 ; Howard and Hudspeth, 1987a ; Denk and Webb, 1992 ). Finally, rapid
deflection can trigger twitches of a hair bundle (Howard and Hudspeth,
1987a ,b, 1988; Jaramillo et al., 1990 ), the subject of the present
study (Marquis et al., 1995 ).
There are three reasons for an interest in the fast motile activity of
hair bundles. First, because bundle deflection directly opens and
closes transduction channels, mechanical measurements may shed light on
rapid events in the gating process. Second, because adaptation probably
involves myosin-based adjustment of the tension in gating springs (for
review, see Hudspeth and Gillespie, 1994 ), such measurements may detect
the stepping activity of individual or clustered myosin molecules.
Third, mechanical measurements may identify the active process
responsible for signal amplification and otoacoustical emissions in the
auditory system (for review, see Probst, 1990 ; Dallos, 1992 ). In the
mammalian cochlea, the contractile activity of outer hair cells is
thought to account for amplification. Contractile outer hair cells are
confined to mammals, however, whereas amplification is ubiquitous in
vertebrate auditory systems. Active motility by hair bundles, powered
by channel gating (Howard and Hudspeth, 1988 ; Jaramillo et al., 1990 )
or by myosin stepping (for review, see Hudspeth and Gillespie, 1994 ),
could provide an additional mechanism for augmenting mechanical signals
in the internal ear.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Experimental preparation. Experiments were conducted
at room temperature (21-26°C) on individual hair cells in the
macular epithelium from the bullfrog, Rana catesbeiana.
Internal ears were removed from doubly pithed animals and transferred
to an oxygenated saline solution containing (in m): 110 Na+, 2 K+, 4 Ca2+, 118 Cl , 3 -glucose, and 5 HEPES. The solution's
osmotic strength was ~230 mmol · kg 1; its pH was
adjusted to 7.25.
After isolation of the sacculus and removal of its otoconia, the
compact otolithic membrane was enzymatically separated from the
underlying hair bundles by treatment for 20-60 min with 20-50
mg · l 1 subtilopeptidase A (synonymous with
subtilisin Carlsberg and protease type VIII; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) in
saline solution. After the otolithic membrane had been gently peeled
away with an eyelash, the epithelial preparation was secured with metal
clips to the coverslip bottom of a 500 µl experimental chamber. To
prolong its activity, the preparation was periodically bathed in fresh,
oxygenated saline solution. When indicated, we substituted a gentamycin
saline solution supplemented with 100 µ gentamycin
sulfate (Sigma). A few control experiments were conducted containing
(in m): 110 Na+, 2 K+, 0.25 Ca2+, 111 Cl , 3 -glucose, and 5 HEPES.
Preparations were observed with a mechanically stabilized upright
microscope (UEM, Zeiss, Jena, Germany) equipped with differential
interference contrast optics. Illuminated by a 100 W mercury arc lamp
(HBO 100, Zeiss), sensory epithelia were examined through a 40× water
immersion objective lens of numerical aperture 0.75, a 1.6× accessory
lens, and 10× oculars. To minimize mechanical noise, the microscope
was mounted on an internally damped, air-suspended table (GS-34-FR,
Newport Bio-Instruments, Fountain Valley, CA) within an acoustically
isolated room constructed on a concrete pad.
Membrane potential measurement. In most experiments, each
hair cell's membrane potential was recorded during mechanical
stimulation. Microelectrodes were fabricated with an electrode puller
(P-80/PC, Sutter Instrument, Novato, CA) such that their resistances
were 100-300 M when filled with an internal solution of 3 KCl buffered to a pH of 8.5 with 10 m
glycylglycine (Thomas, 1978 ). To facilitate cellular penetration in the
restricted space set by the 1.6 mm working distance of the objective
lens, electrodes were bent through an angle of ~60° about 0.5 mm
from their tips (Hudspeth and Corey, 1978 ). With a Huxley-type
micromanipulator (Frederick Haer, Brunswick, ME), each electrode was
inserted into an apical cellular surface adjacent to the hair bundle's
short edge, the side opposite the stimulus fiber's usual attachment.
Membrane potential recordings were referenced to the bath's potential
with a direct-coupled amplifier operated in bridge mode (Axoclamp-2A,
Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA). The amplifier's capacitance
compensation was adjusted for a passband of ~0-1 kHz.
Mechanical stimulation. Hair bundles were displaced with
flexible stimulus fibers fabricated from borosilicate glass rods 1.2 mm
in diameter (Kimble KG-33, Garner Glass, Claremont, CA). Each fiber was
first reduced with an electrode puller, then pulled still finer in a
direction perpendicular to its shank (Howard and Hudspeth, 1988 ). To
facilitate measurement of the fiber tip's position, the fiber's
optical contrast was increased by coating it with an ~100 nm layer of
gold palladium (Hummer VI, Anatech, Alexandria, VA). A fiber was lastly
trimmed with fine iris scissors (Moria 9600, Fine Science Tools, Foster
City, CA) until its stiffness and damping constant were 200-1200
µN · m 1 and 50-400
nN · sec · m 1, respectively, as determined by
analysis of the power spectrum of the tip's Brownian motion in water
(Howard and Hudspeth, 1988 ; Denk et al., 1989 ). The tip of a finished
fiber measured 400-500 nm in diameter.
A fiber was horizontally mounted at its base in a holder attached to a
stack-type piezoelectrical actuator (P835.10, Physik Instrumente,
Waldbronn, Germany), which was in turn secured to a Huxley-type
micromanipulator. Driven by a matched power supply (P-870, Physik
Instrumente), the actuator could produce calibrated displacements of at
least ±1 µm with a bandwidth exceeding 5 kHz. Using the displacement
monitor described below, we measured the movements of an unimpeded
fiber in response to the application of a range of voltage steps to the
actuator. Knowing the relation between actuator output and applied
voltage, we could infer the position of the fiber's base during
experiments from the voltage.
Most experiments were conducted on large hair cells near the abneural
edge of the saccular macula; a few experiments confirmed that small
hair bundles can also produce twitches. Except when specifically noted,
the microscope's stage was rotated such that each hair bundle was
displaced along its axis of morphological symmetry, and therefore
greatest mechanical sensitivity (Shotwell et al., 1981 ). Hair bundle
motion was usually elicited by affixing the tip of a stimulus fiber to
the free surface of the kinociliary bulb (Fig.
1A). In a few experiments, the
fiber's tip was instead applied to the sides of the hair bundle's
shortest stereocilia, the bundle surface opposite the kinocilium.
Fig. 1.
The experimental system and control experiments.
A, In preparation for stimulation, the stimulus fiber's
tip was brought into contact with the bundle at its kinociliary bulb,
and the displacement monitor was centered over the fiber's tip. After
application of a displacement to the fiber's base, the bundle's
resultant movement was measured by the displacement monitor. The
displacement monitor reported a voltage that was proportional to the
difference in light received by its two photocells. B,
In a base movement experiment, the base of a stimulus fiber of
stiffness 1190 µN · m 1 was abruptly displaced
(bottom trace). When the fiber's tip was unengaged, it
followed the displacement pulse with high fidelity (top
trace). When the same fiber's tip was attached to a flexible
glass filament of stiffness 511 µN · m 1, the tip's
movement (middle trace) was diminished as a result of
the stimulus fiber's flexion. C, Under displacement
clamp conditions, the tip displacement of an unloaded stimulus fiber of
stiffness 595 µN · m 1 (top trace)
essentially reached its final value within 2 msec. The force measured
by the clamp system (bottom trace) reflected the viscous
drag on the fiber, whose drag coefficient was 198 nN · sec · m 1. D, When the same
fiber was attached to a flexible glass filament of stiffness 820 µN · m 1, the tip motion (top trace)
was equally fast. The clamp force (bottom trace) showed
both a steady-state component attributable to the elastic load and
transients arising from viscous drag. The data for panels
B, C, and D were filtered
at 10 kHz and sampled at 25 kHz; each trace is the average of 10 responses.
[View Larger Version of this Image (14K GIF file)]
Experiments in which square pulses of displacement were
delivered to a fiber's base were termed ``base movement''
experiments, whereas those in which the fiber's tip was commanded to
produce displacement pulses under negative feedback conditions were
denoted ``displacement clamp'' experiments. Computer generated as
square-pulse templates, stimuli were usually delivered as trains of
successive templates that varied in the value of one parameter. Unless
otherwise indicated, the interval between presentations of successive
templates within a stimulus train was 400 msec.
Displacement monitor. Movements of a stimulus fiber were
measured with a displacement monitor mounted atop the microscope's
vertical camera port. With a 12.5× ocular in the trinocular tube, the
height of the monitor was adjusted to provide a magnification of 1000×
there. The displacement monitor was attached to the camera port by a
closed-loop micrometer actuator (850B-05, Newport, Irvine, CA) powered
by a matched-motion controller (PMC100, Newport), which could
horizontally translate the displacement monitor over a 13 mm range with
a precision of 0.1 µm. Because of the optical magnification, the
system could thus accomplish a movement equivalent at the level of the
specimen to 13 µm with a precision of 0.1 nm.
Within the displacement monitor, the image of a fiber's tip was
projected onto a photodiode pair (UV-140-2, EG & G Electro-Optics,
Salem, MA). A pair of current-to-voltage converters and a differential
amplifier produced an output voltage proportional to the difference in
light received by the two photodiodes (Fig. 1A).
When centered over the image of a stimulus fiber's tip, the monitor
registered 0 V; movement of the tip caused the output to change
linearly over a range approximately equal to the fiber's radius.
The gain of the displacement monitor, or the ratio of output voltage to
fiber tip displacement, was determined in base movement experiments by
computer activation of a calibration piezoelectrical actuator with a
dedicated amplifier (PZL-030 and PZ-150 , Burleigh
Instruments, Fishers, NY), which served to displace the monitor's
photodiode pair (Art et al., 1986 ; Howard and Hudspeth, 1987a ).
Immediately before each stimulus fiber command, the computer issued a
template-based command for the calibration actuator to move the
photodiode pair by a known amount, usually 20 µm. Through this
calibrated motion pulse and knowledge of the optical magnification at
the level of the displacement monitor, the output voltage was converted
to an equivalent displacement value for subsequent data analysis.
Displacement clamp force measurement. Negative feedback
circuitry was used to measure the force exerted by a hair bundle when
it was displaced and subsequently held at a new position. In such a
displacement clamp experiment, the command signal was first compared
with the displacement monitor output representing the fiber tip's
position, then the difference between these signals was amplified and
delivered to the stimulus fiber actuator.
In earlier work, a phase lag, in the form of a parallel capacitor, was
introduced in the feedforward circuit to maintain stability at high
loop gains (Jaramillo and Hudspeth, 1993 ). This approach so limited the
system's bandwidth that the bundle's rise time to a step command
could not be decreased to <3 msec, a rise time usually too long to
elicit the phenomena studied here. To obtain the bandwidth necessary
for clamping more rapid motions, a single-pole phase-lead controller
(Ogata, 1970 ) was added in series with the capacitor. After this
modification (Benser, 1995 ), the system's bandwidth was dominated by
the mechanical resonance of the stimulus-fiber actuation system. By
minimization of a fiber's shank length, typically to <20 mm, we
raised this resonant frequency above 1 kHz; we could thus make
displacement clamp measurements with a temporal resolution comparable
to that obtained in base movement experiments.
The elastic force exerted by the stimulus fiber to maintain a hair
bundle's deflection was computed from the product of the fiber's
flexion and stiffness. The bundle's restoring force was equal to the
fiber's elastic force less any hydrodynamic drag introduced by
movement of the fiber and bundle. Each fiber's damping constant was
estimated from its Brownian motion; the bundle's damping constant was
assumed to be 200 nN · sec · m 1 (Howard and
Hudspeth, 1988 ). The acceleration of the hair bundle and the stimulus
fiber tip never exceeded 400 mm · sec 2, so the
associated inertial forces were <1 pN. Because the force produced by a
hair bundle was 50 pN in most experiments, these inertial forces were
neglected.
The gain of the displacement monitor in base movement experiments was
determined by calibrated displacement of the photodiode pair
immediately before each stimulus. Because of feedback movement of the
stimulus fiber during displacement clamp experiments, the displacement
monitor's gain was determined within 1 min before or after each set of
recordings. While the fiber was held at a constant position, the
changes in output voltage resulting from the application of calibrated
step motions were measured with the displacement monitor. The slope of
the least-squares linear fit to this relation, scaled by the optical
magnification, yielded the displacement monitor's gain. During a
displacement clamp experiment, the system's response to the motion of
the displacement monitor before each stimulus provided a measure of the
efficacy of clamping.
Data collection and analysis. A computer (Quadra 800, Apple
Computer, Cupertino, CA) controlled the stimulus fiber and photodiode
calibration actuators through an interface (NB-AO-6, National
Instruments, Austin, TX) equipped with 12-bit digital-to-analog
converters. Except when otherwise indicated, computer outputs to the
photodiode calibration and stimulus fiber actuators were filtered with
eight-pole Bessel filters (852, Wavetek, San Diego, CA) at half-power
frequencies of 20 Hz and 0.5-1.5 kHz, respectively. Unless otherwise
noted, the displacement monitor and membrane potential outputs were
filtered at 1.0 kHz, sampled with 12-bit analog-to-digital converters,
and communicated to the computer at 2.5 kHz through an interface and
direct memory access module (NB-A2000 and NB-DMA2800, National
Instruments).
Software was written in LabVIEW (versions 3.0.1 and 3.1, National
Instruments). Data analysis was performed on computers (Quadra 700, 800, and 840AV, Apple Computer) using LabVIEW and Excel (version 5.0, Microsoft, Redmond, WA). Figures were prepared for publication with
Canvas (version 3.5, Deneba Software, Miami, FL).
Theoretical performance of the stimulation system.
Measurements of a hair bundle's steady-state properties rely on
the linear elasticity of glass fibers and the application of Hooke's
law (Okuno and Hiramoto, 1979 ). Because there is no literature
concerning the use of such fibers in the measurement of transient
bundle motions, it is necessary to define the limitations on
measurements made with high temporal resolution. The use of a novel
displacement clamp system additionally mandates analysis of its
theoretical performance.
Suppose that, by displacement of a stimulus fiber's base through a
distance Y, a hair bundle is abruptly deflected by an
amount, X, that is a function of time. Let the stiffnesses
of the fiber and bundle be KSF and
KHB, respectively, and the drag coefficients for
the fiber and bundle be SF and HB,
respectively. In addition, make the simplifying assumptions that
inertial terms may be neglected and that drag is concentrated at the
fiber's tip and bundle's top, rather than distributed along both the
fiber and the bundle. Finally, let FA represent
a time-dependent force produced within the hair bundle; a positive sign
for this force corresponds to a force that pushes the stimulus fiber in
the positive direction.
At any time, the force exerted by the fiber against the bundle and that
produced by the bundle on the fiber are equal and opposite, so the
total force provided by the fiber, FSF, is:
|
(1)
|
If a step displacement is applied at the fiber's base at the
time t = 0, the bundle's motion is described
by:
|
(2)
|
where is the time constant characterizing the hair bundle's
relaxation and T is an integration variable.
The practical consequence of this relation can be seen by evaluating
the system's response to a plausible active force generated by the
hair bundle. Although any arbitrary force might be considered,
including a very general one such as a delta function, it is simplest
to calculate the response to a force step of constant magnitude
FS beginning with the externally imposed bundle
deflection and persisting indefinitely thereafter. In this
instance,
|
(3)
|
Immediately after application of the stimulus, the bundle
remains in its resting position. Much later, the bundle's displacement
reaches a steady level determined by both the bundle's stiffness and
the enduring force production. The two components rise exponentially
toward their plateau levels at rates determined by the same time
constant. The force exerted by the fiber is:
|
(4)
|
The negative sign of the active-force term indicates that a
positively directed force generated within the bundle reduces the force
that the stimulus fiber must provide to effect a given positive bundle
displacement.
Of critical importance in both relations are the time constant and the
associated corner (cutoff) frequency, fC, which
are given by:
|
(5)
|
Our ability to measure the bundle's passive motion and our
capacity to resolve active forces are both constrained in a similar way
by the time constant. We wish to minimize the time constant so as to
most precisely evaluate the bundle's properties, especially the time
course and magnitude of the active force and their dependence on the
extent and rate of bundle motion. The values of
KHB and HB are not subject to
modification and are likely to be similar for a broad range of hair
cells with bundles of similar dimensions. The temporal responsiveness
of the measurement system can therefore be improved in only two ways:
by decreasing the drag coefficient of the fiber, SF, or
by increasing the fiber's stiffness, KSF. The
former route offers only limited hope, for decreasing the fiber's drag
coefficient ceases to be of significance after that parameter's value
becomes substantially less than the bundle's coefficient of 130-200
nN · sec · m 1 (Howard and Hudspeth, 1988 ; Denk et
al., 1989 ). Increasing the fiber's stiffness would appear to be a more
promising strategy: if the fiber is appreciably more rigid than a hair
bundle, whose dynamic stiffness in the frog's sacculus is ~1000
µN · m 1 (Howard and Hudspeth, 1987a , 1988 ;
Jaramillo and Hudspeth, 1993 ), then the time constant is inversely
proportional to the fiber's stiffness.
Why is a very stiff fiber not desirable? Our capacity to measure a
bundle's mechanical properties rests on our ability to measure a
fiber's flexion. If the fiber becomes too stiff, its deflection is
insignificant, and our ability to measure small displacements and
forces vanishes. It is possible to estimate the stiffness of the most
rigid fiber that would be useful. Brownian motion sets an absolute
limit on the motion that we can measure with high temporal resolution;
by the principle of equipartition of energy, the root mean square (RMS)
thermal motion expected at the tip of a fiber attached to a hair bundle
is:
|
(6)
|
where k is the Boltzmann constant and T is
the thermodynamical temperature. The minimal force that we can measure,
FRMS(MIN), is determined by the smallest
resolvable displacement:
|
(7)
|
This result demonstrates that increasing the fiber's stiffness
improves temporal resolution, but unfortunately does so at the expense
of displacement sensitivity. If we were to accept an RMS force
sensitivity of, for example, 3 pN, the greatest permissible fiber
stiffness would be ~1200 µN · m 1. For a fiber and
hair bundle of the stiffnesses and drag coefficients discussed
throughout this paper, the associated time constant would be 400 µsec, and hence the corner frequency would be
fC 400 Hz. Using conventional, base movement
stimulation, there appears to be no means of escaping the limitation
imposed by the time constant.
The displacement clamp configuration can potentially improve this
situation. With this system, the output of the displacement monitor is
compared with the displacement command signal,
VC, in a high-gain differential amplifier, the
output of which serves as an error signal that is fed back to the
stimulus fiber actuator. Let the amplifier's gain be G.
Suppose, moreover, that the displacement monitor's output,
VD, is directly proportional to the displacement
of the fiber's tip: VD = X.
Finally, assume that the actuator's displacement output, the fiber's
base displacement Y, is directly proportional to the error
signal, VE: Y = VE. The equations that describe the
displacement clamp system,
|
(8)
|
may be combined to produce an expression for the total force
exerted by the stimulus fiber under clamp conditions,
|
(9)
|
If the displacement command is a step function, we obtain from
this relation and Equation 1 the expected bundle motion:
|
(10)
|
If the active force produced by a hair bundle is again a
maintained step of amplitude FS,
|
(11)
|
Note that the time constant and corner frequency for
displacement clamp recording differ from those obtained for
conventional stimulation; under displacement clamp conditions,
|
(12)
|
If the amplifier's gain is very great, we find that:
|
(13)
|
In this instance, the hair bundle follows the commanded step
displacement with its relaxation rate set by the system's time
constant, but undergoes no displacement due to the active force. With a
high amplifier gain, the time constant and corresponding corner
frequency approach the limiting values:
|
(14)
|
The gain of the clamp system is thus of critical
importance, for increasing the gain decreases the time constant and
raises the corner frequency. It is therefore potentially possible to
obtain better temporal resolution under displacement clamp conditions
than with conventional, base movement stimulation. According to this
simplified analysis, there is no theoretical limit to the effect of
increased gain. The practical limit to the system's temporal
responsiveness is set by deviations of the actual apparatus from the
theoretical ideal, for example, by noise in the displacement monitor
and clamp amplifier. In addition, the occurrence of higher-order
flexural modes in stimulus fibers (Gittes et al., 1993 ) slows a
fiber's response and makes the time course of its relaxation more
complex than that described by a single exponential relation.
With the bundle's position successfully controlled by the clamp
system, we may inquire how the fiber's base moves; it is this signal
that is useful in determining the force exerted by the clamp system to
counter the passive and active forces produced by the bundle. Although
the expressions for base displacement and fiber force are complicated,
they assume simpler forms when the amplifier's gain is very high. In
that instance,
|
(15)
|
The force exerted by the stimulus fiber is then:
|
(16)
|
We should therefore measure a large but brief force transient
associated with repositioning of the bundle, after which the active
force's effect should be observed, filtered by the time constant
associated with the clamp system.
Actual performance of the stimulation system. Before
characterizing the rapid movements of hair bundles, we experimentally
tested whether the stimulation system behaved in the theoretically
predicted way. We also wished to ensure that the system was free of
artifacts that might be confused with transient mechanical responses of
hair bundles. It is known, for example, that rapid mechanical
stimulation with a flexible fiber can produce ``whiplash'' or
``back-flip'' movements (Crawford and Fettiplace, 1985 ), in which the
fiber's tip initially moves in the direction opposite the displacement
imposed at the fiber's base. In addition, the high-frequency
components of stimulus pulses can excite resonance in the actuator or
fiber, leading to oscillation of the fiber's tip.
When the base of an unencumbered stimulus fiber was displaced by an
amount typical of the experiments in this study, the fiber's tip
faithfully followed the square displacement command (Fig.
1B). When the stimulus fiber was placed in contact with a
glass filament of stiffness similar to that of a hair bundle, the
loaded stimulus fiber was again well behaved throughout a rapid
displacement. As long as a load, when present, was applied at a
fiber's tip, and as long as the tip's image was properly centered on
the photodiode pair, whiplash motions and other artifacts were never
observed.
We additionally confirmed that the displacement clamp system operated
as expected. With the system appropriately adjusted, a fiber's tip
typically achieved 95% of the commanded displacement despite the load
imposed by an attached hair bundle (Fig. 10). When commanded to move
under displacement clamp conditions, even a relatively compliant
stimulus fiber reached its final position within 2 msec (Fig.
1C). This performance was not significantly degraded by
attaching the fiber to a glass filament of stiffness similar to that of
a hair bundle (Fig. 1D).
Fig. 10.
Displacement clamp measurement of the twitch
force. A, When a pulse displacement command (top
trace) was applied to the clamp system, the fiber's base
underwent a convoluted excursion (second trace) while
effecting the commanded hair bundle displacement (third
trace). The total force exerted by the fiber ( fourth
trace) was determined by multiplication of its flexion, the
difference between the second and third traces, by its calibrated
stiffness of 951 µN · m 1. The hydrodynamic damping
force on the fiber and bundle, which produced transients at the onset
and conclusion of the displacement pulse, was calculated as the product
of the fiber tip's instantaneous velocity and the summed drag
coefficients of the fiber and bundle (Howard and Hudspeth, 1988 ).
Subtraction of this force component yielded the force exerted by the
bundle (fifth trace), which was directed opposite
to that produced by the fiber. The downward deflections
at the left of three traces (arrows)
demonstrate the displacement clamp's effectiveness. When the
photodiode pair in the displacement monitor was subjected to a 20 µm
calibration pulse, the clamp circuit produced a compensatory, 20 nm
movement of the fiber's tip. The record of bundle motion consequently
shows almost no signal, while the records of fiber base displacement
and the force traces display the response. These records indicate that
the clamp system was, in this instance, 95% effective at controlling
movement of the fiber's tip. B, C,
Comparison of the same hair bundle's responses under base movement
conditions (top traces) and displacement clamp
conditions (bottom traces) demonstrates the relation
between the twitch and the associated bundle forces on two time scales.
The positively directed initial component of the twitch is associated
with a positively directed force exerted by the bundle (left
vertical line in C). The twitch's second,
negatively directed component corresponds to a negatively directed
bundle force (right vertical line in C).
The fiber's damping constant was 79.5 nN · sec · m 1, and its base displacement for the
top traces of B and C was
120 nm. The traces in A represent the averages of five
results; those in B and C are the
averages of 10 results.
[View Larger Version of this Image (13K GIF file)]
RESULTS
The evoked hair bundle twitch
After deflection with a flexible stimulus fiber, a hair bundle
displayed a complex pattern of motion (Fig. 2). At the
onset of the displacement, the bundle underwent a rapid excursion in
the direction of the stimulus. This fast response, as well as the
oppositely directed fast movement at the end of the stimulus pulse,
reflected the bundle's passive elastic reactance. During a protracted
stimulus, the hair bundle also displayed a slow relaxation in the
direction of the stimulation, typically with a time constant near 25 msec, indicative of adaptation (Howard and Hudspeth, 1987a ). This
mechanical correlate of adaptation also occurred in the opposite
direction at the cessation of the displacement pulse.
Fig. 2.
The hair bundle's evoked mechanical twitch.
A, A hair bundle was stimulated by application of a 175 nm displacement pulse (bottom trace) at the base of a
flexible fiber whose tip was coupled to the bundle's top. After
displacement of the bundle toward its tall edge, a positive stimulus,
the bundle's movement (top trace) in the direction of
the applied force was briefly interrupted by a biphasic twitch
(arrowhead). A spike of depolarizing receptor potential
(middle trace) coincided with the twitch.
B, When the same hair bundle was subjected to a negative
displacement pulse of an identical magnitude, a twitch and transient
depolarization occurred during the positively directed bundle motion at
the end of the stimulus (arrowhead). C, A
temporally expanded presentation of the bundle motion in
A demonstrates the measurement of a twitch's size. The
amplitude of a twitch was taken as the displacement between its peak
and nadir, as shown by the coarse horizontal lines.
Back-extrapolation of the subsequent bundle motion ( fine
line) yielded an alternative, larger estimate of a twitch's
size. The upper time calibration applies only to
C. All traces are averages of 10 records. The fiber's
stiffness was 293 µN · m 1; the cell's resting
potential was 63 mV.
[View Larger Version of this Image (9K GIF file)]
Within a few milliseconds of the onset of a positive stimulus, a
bundle's response was punctuated by a mechanical transient: the
transition between the bundle's immediate displacement and the onset
of adaptation was marked by a brief, biphasic twitch (Fig.
2A). A similar twitch response occurred at the
termination of a negative bundle displacement (Fig. 2B). In
each instance, the initial component of the twitch, movement in the
positive direction, usually appeared as an exaggeration of the
bundle's passive deflection. The twitch's second phase was more
prominent: motion in the direction of the stimulus was transiently
interrupted by movement in the negative direction, against the applied
force.
A mechanical twitch followed positively directed bundle movements in
164 hair cells of 399 studied in detail. Three observations linked the
twitch with mechanoelectrical transduction. First, a twitch was
observed only if a hair cell was capable of normal transduction, i.e.,
if it possessed an intact hair bundle, had a resting membrane potential
below 45 mV, exhibited high sensitivity to small stimuli, and evinced
adaptation. Second, a twitch ensued only after deflection of a hair
bundle along its axis of mechanical sensitivity (Shotwell et al.,
1981 ). Perpendicular stimulation did not evoke a twitch (Fig.
3A). Finally, no twitch occurred when
transduction channels were blocked (Fig. 3B) by exposure of
the bundle to the aminoglycoside antibiotic gentamycin (Kroese et al.,
1989 ).
Fig. 3.
Control experiments. A, A
twitch occurred after stimulation of a hair bundle in the positive
direction (top trace). When the same bundle was
stimulated in an orthogonal direction, however, the twitch was absent
(middle trace). The response returned when the direction
of stimulation was restored to the bundle's plane of symmetry
(bottom trace). The slow bundle relaxation in the middle
panel likely reflected a stimulus that was not perfectly perpendicular
to the bundle's axis of responsiveness. B, A twitch
occurred in the saline solution used for most experiments (top
trace). Substitution of saline solution containing 100 µ gentamicin suppressed the twitch (middle
trace), which returned after restoration of the original
solution (bottom trace). After exposure to
aminoglycoside drugs, both evoked and spontaneous twitching were
potentiated for several minutes (J. Howard, personal communication).
C, An intact hair bundle produced a twitch (top
trace). This response was not materially affected by detaching
the kinocilium from the hair bundle and immobilizing it against the
apical cellular surface with a microelectrode (bottom
trace). D, A hair bundle bathed in standard
saline solution containing 4 m Ca2+ produced a
twitch (top trace). After replacement of this solution
with one containing 250 µ Ca2+, the same
bundle produced a twitch of similar magnitude but greater duration
(bottom trace). In the presence of a Ca2+
concentration similar to that of endolymph, mechanical stimulation
often produced oscillatory bundle movements at a frequency (here 65 Hz)
similar to that at which saccular afferent fibers are tuned (Koyama et
al., 1982 ). Stimulus fiber base displacements for A,
B, C, and D were 130, 140, 300, and 143 nm, respectively; the fiber stiffnesses were 448, 353, 137, and 535 µN · m 1, respectively; the traces
represent the averages of 12, 14-16, 10, and 10 responses,
respectively.
[View Larger Version of this Image (11K GIF file)]
The twitch was produced by the stereocilia in a hair bundle, for the
response persisted in bundles whose kinocilia had been disconnected
from the stereocilia by microdissection (Hudspeth and Jacobs, 1979 ) and
were held flat against the epithelial surface with microelectrodes
(Fig. 3C). Twitching was not an aberrant response to the
ionic environment ordinarily used in experimentation, in which hair
cells were exposed to a saline solution containing 4 m
Ca2+. A twitch could readily be evoked when a hair bundle
was bathed in saline solution containing 250 µ
Ca2+ (Fig. 3D), the concentration found in frog
endolymph (Corey and Hudspeth, 1979 ).
Negatively directed stimulus components evoked twitches infrequently,
in only 21 cells of the sample. Fourteen of these cells exhibited
twitches in response to both positive and negative stimulus components
(Fig. 4); the other seven displayed only negative
twitches in association with negative stimulus components. When a
twitch was elicited by a negatively directed bundle displacement, it
usually followed a static offset of the bundle by 500 nm in the
positive direction. Because responses to negative stimulus components
were rarely encountered, the balance of the present study is devoted to
analysis of twitches elicited by positive bundle motions.
Fig. 4.
A twitch evoked by a negatively directed
stimulus component. Driven by a 213 nm movement of the fiber's base
(bottom trace), the hair bundle's movement (top
trace) included both a positively directed twitch at the
pulse's outset and a negatively directed twitch
(arrowhead) at the pulse's conclusion. Unlike the
initial twitch, the mechanical response at the pulse's end was not
associated with a strong spike of depolarizing receptor potential
(middle trace). The results from 10 stimuli were
averaged. The fiber's stiffness was 283 µN · m 1;
the cell's resting potential was 56 mV.
[View Larger Version of this Image (11K GIF file)]
Dependence of the twitch on the amplitude and rate of hair
bundle deflection
To characterize the twitch, we required a quantitative
measure of the response's magnitude. We defined the amplitude of a
twitch as the distance between the peak of the initial, positively
directed motion and the greatest extent of the subsequent, negative
excursion (Fig. 2C). A reasonable alternative measure would
have been the distance between the positive peak deflection and the
intercept of the bundle movement subsequent to the twitch extrapolated
back to the rising phase of bundle deflection. However, because the
time course of adaptation is not strictly exponential (Assad and Corey,
1992 ) and extrapolation is therefore complex, we elected to use the
simpler definition of twitch amplitude. For data analysis and plotting,
hair bundle displacement was scored as the distance from a bundle's
resting position to the most negative position during a twitch.
Twitches occurred in response to positive bundle deflections as small
as 5 nm. It is not certain whether lesser stimuli also elicited
twitches; for averages of 10-16 experimental records, responses
smaller than 1 nm were lost in the noise. When positive stimuli of
progressively greater amplitude were applied to a hair bundle, the
amplitude of the twitch grew with the bundle deflection (Fig.
5A). This relation was not monotonic: the
twitch reached a maximal amplitude on hair bundle displacements of
13-48 nm, then declined with still larger stimuli (Fig.
5B). Similar relations were observed for a total of 24 hair
bundles on which complete measurements were made; for this sample, the
average bundle displacement at which the maximal twitch could be evoked
was 34 ± 9 nm (mean ± SD). The greatest stimulus-evoked
twitch observed from any bundle was 30 nm.
Fig. 5.
The twitch's dependence on hair bundle
displacement, as determined by application of variable-amplitude
displacement pulses to the base of a stimulus fiber. A,
This bundle's superimposed responses showed that the twitch grew in
amplitude with increasing bundle displacement for values up to ~40
nm; for greater bundle displacements, the twitch's amplitude
progressively declined to zero. B, The twitch's
amplitude is plotted as a function of hair bundle displacement. In
A, 14 step displacements, each 400 msec in duration,
were delivered to the fiber's base; the steps were uniformly spaced
between and included 400 and 400 nm. An additional record was
obtained in the absence of a displacement. The results from 10 stimulus
wave trains were averaged; averaged responses of <1 nm, which did not
significantly exceed the noise level, are plotted as zero. The data in
B were obtained from the same hair bundle by three
repetitions of the procedure used to obtain A. The
fiber's stiffness was 293 µN · m 1.
[View Larger Version of this Image (15K GIF file)]
By varying the corner frequency of the low-pass filter for the stimulus
fiber actuator, we investigated the twitch's sensitivity to the rate
of bundle deflection. Slowing stimulation by increasing the rise time
of bundle movement diminished and broadened the twitch (Fig.
6A). Moreover, as the bundle's rise time
increased, the displacement required to evoke a maximal twitch also
rose (Fig. 6B). Including the hair bundle whose response is
illustrated, all of the 10 bundles studied in detail displayed similar
sensitivities of twitching to the rate of stimulus rise.
Fig. 6.
Effect of stimulus rise time on the amplitude and
time course of twitches. A, Sets of variable-amplitude
stimuli were delivered to a hair bundle, with each set
low-pass-filtered at a different frequency. The twitch's duration
increased and its amplitude declined with increasing rise time. The
half-power frequencies of stimulus filtering were 500 Hz (left
panel, averages of 10 presentations), 250 Hz (middle
panel, averages of 9 presentations), and 150 Hz (right
panel, averages of 8 presentations). Filtering at still higher
frequencies did not materially change twitch durations or amplitudes
from those observed for filtering at 500 Hz. Fiber-base excursions were
varied from 57 to 400 nm in 57 nm increments; the fiber's stiffness
was 293 µN · m 1. B, Twitch amplitude
is plotted as a function of hair bundle displacement for the three
families of variable-amplitude responses shown in A.
Twitch amplitude decreased with greater rise time; in addition, the
bundle displacement that elicited the largest twitch increased with the
rise time. Because repetition of the stimuli elicited similar
responses, it is improbable that fiber drift accounted for the observed
results. The half-power frequencies of stimulus filtering were 500 Hz
( ), 250 Hz (x), and 150 Hz (+).
[View Larger Version of this Image (20K GIF file)]
Relation of twitch amplitude to hair bundle holding position
The twitch was sensitive to the position at which a bundle was
maintained before stimulation. This holding position was adjusted by
offsetting the base of the adherent stimulus fiber; the magnitude of
the offset was determined from the motion required to re-center the
displacement monitor over the bundle's new position. Bringing a
stimulus fiber into contact with a hair bundle can move the bundle
slightly and thus render the zero position of bundle offset somewhat
uncertain. To minimize this problem, we used an eyepiece reticle to
measure each hair bundle's position before attachment of a fiber, then
restored the bundle to that position before stimulation.
Even when elicited by identical stimuli, the amplitude and time course
of a bundle's twitch changed substantially and reversibly between
holding positions (Fig. 7A). A twitch could
be evoked from a range of holding positions, usually between 350 and
300 nm; larger offsets in either direction suppressed the response.
Because adaptation by the mechanoelectrical transduction process is
limited to a similar range, this effect may reflect the influence of
the extent spring thought to be associated with each transduction
element (Shepherd and Corey, 1994 ).
Fig. 7.
The effect of holding position on twitches.
A, By application of static offsets to the attached
fiber, a hair bundle's holding position was adjusted by the amounts
shown below the traces. Identical, 140 nm displacement
pulses were then applied to the fiber's base. Although twitches
occurred for a range of holding positions around the bundle's resting
position, they were suppressed by holding the bundle far in the
positive or negative direction. Each trace is the average response to
8-10 stimulus presentations; the fiber's stiffness was 272 µN · m 1. B, The mean twitch
amplitudes of responses resulting from 140 nm stimulus pulses are
plotted as a function of the bundle's holding position. No twitches
occurred from holding positions still more positive or negative than
those shown. C, Adjustment of a hair bundle's holding
position caused twitches to become several cycles of damped mechanical
oscillation. The bundle offsets for the three response families are
shown to the bottom left of the respective records.
Traces are the averages of 10-13 wavetrains of fiber-base excursions
that were uniformly spaced between 300 and 300 nm. The fiber's
stiffness was 623 µN · m 1. The distance
calibration bar at the left applies to
A, the bar at the right
applies to C, and the temporal calibration
bar (middle) applies to both.
[View Larger Version of this Image (27K GIF file)]
Twitch amplitudes fell into a bell-shaped distribution about the
bundle's undisturbed resting position (Fig. 7B). For 35 hair cells, we found that the twitch could grow into several cycles of
damped oscillation (Fig. 7C). This behavior could often be
accentuated by adjustment of the bundle's offset position.
Fatigue, potentiation, and repriming of the twitch
To determine whether the twitch exhibits fatigue or a refractory
period, we stimulated hair bundles twice in succession and varied the
interval between the pulse onsets. For 8 of 11 bundles, the twitch
elicited by the second pulse was distinctly smaller than the first
response (Fig. 8A). This phenomenon was most
prominent for stimulus intervals of <20 msec. Six bundles exhibited a
potentiation of the second twitch, which was most pronounced for
stimulus intervals exceeding 30 msec and followed a time course similar
to that of adaptation (Fig. 8B) (Howard and Hudspeth,
1987a ). Five bundles exhibited both short-interval fatigue and
long-interval potentiation; one bundle exhibited only potentiation,
three bundles solely fatigue. Two bundles showed no change in the
magnitude of the second twitch relative to that of the first.
Fig. 8.
Fatigue and potentiation of the twitch response.
A, Seven pairs of equal-amplitude and equal-duration
displacement pulses were delivered to a stimulus fiber's base with
various delays between the pulses' commencements. The twitch ensuing
from the second stimulus was partially suppressed for the smallest
intervals, then became slightly exaggerated with larger intervals. The
delay between successive pairs of pulses was 150 msec; the results of
10 wave trains were averaged. The fiber of stiffness 535 µN · m 1 was displaced by 200 nm at its base. The
displacement monitor's output was filtered at 7 kHz and sampled by the
computer at 14 kHz. B, The amplitude of the twitch
elicited by the second pulse grew with the delay between the pulses'
onsets. The mean of the control response is shown with its SD.
[View Larger Version of this Image (22K GIF file)]
A bundle's ability to twitch during the positively directed return
from a negative displacement increased with the duration of the
deflection (Fig. 9A). The time course over
which the twitch reached its greatest size depended on the amplitude of
the stimulus: the smaller the bundle's negative displacement, the less
time was required for the twitch to attain its maximal amplitude (data
not shown). For displacements of ~50 nm, the twitch's amplitude
increased with a time course again resembling that of adaptation (Fig.
9B).
Fig. 9.
Development of the twitch during negative
stimulation. A, A hair bundle was subjected to 10 stimuli of equal size, a fiber-base displacement of 300 nm, but
differing durations. The amplitude of the twitch at the displacement's
conclusion grew monotonically with the duration of the stimulus. The
delay between successive stimuli was 300 msec; the results of 14 stimulus wavetrains were averaged. The displacement monitor's output
was filtered at 3.5 kHz and communicated to the computer at 10 kHz. The
fiber's stiffness was 310 µN · m 1.
B, A plot of twitch amplitudes from A
against the durations of negative pulses demonstrates the gradual
development of the capacity for twitching. Note that the time course of
twitch capacitation approximately corresponds to that of mechanical
adaptation.
[View Larger Version of this Image (21K GIF file)]
Forces associated with the twitch
A fast displacement clamp system permitted us to measure the
forces exerted by a hair bundle during twitches in eight hair cells.
These forces were determined from the flexion of the stimulus fiber
required to effect and maintain a bundle's deflection in response to a
displacement command pulse (Fig. 10A). To
displace a bundle in the positive direction, the fiber initially worked
against the forces due to the elastic reactance of the hair bundle and
the viscous drag on the bundle and fiber. During a maintained
displacement, the force produced by the fiber gradually declined during
the adaptation process (Jaramillo and Hudspeth, 1993 ).
The force transient recorded immediately after a positive bundle
displacement, and hence associated with twitching, was distinctly
biphasic (Fig. 10B); this was especially apparent for
twitches that had prolonged rising phases. The bundle first produced a
positively directed force, i.e., a force in the direction of the
stimulus. Within a few milliseconds, this component was followed by a
larger force in the opposite direction, against the applied force.
Comparison of the forces exerted under displacement clamp conditions
with the twitch elicited from the same bundle under base movement
conditions indicated that the twitch's positive phase coincided with
the positively directed component of bundle force (Fig.
10C). The second, negatively directed component of the
twitch corresponded to a force exerted by the bundle in the negative
direction.
Relation of the twitch to mechanoelectrical transduction
The twitch was consistently associated with robust
mechanoelectrical transduction. During positive stimulation, a large
transient in the depolarizing receptor potential coincided with the
hair bundle's twitch (Fig. 2A). Twitches evoked by
negative stimuli were accompanied by negative receptor potentials (Fig.
4); these hyperpolarizations did not, however, exhibit the fast time
course and large magnitude typical of responses to positive stimuli.
Cells whose hair bundles produced distinct twitches, at least 3 nm in
amplitude, yielded an average maximal receptor potential of 9.1 ± 6.9 mV (mean ± SD, n = 164 cells). By contrast,
morphologically similar hair cells lacking twitches displayed a mean
peak response of 3.8 ± 3.5 mV (n = 235). By a
one-tailed t test, the former is a significantly greater
value (p < 10 16). In many
instances, the membrane potential exhibited oscillations subsequent to
stimulation (Fig. 11A), a manifestation of
the electrical resonance characteristic of the bullfrog's saccular
hair cells (Lewis and Hudspeth, 1983 ; Hudspeth and Lewis, 1988a ,b).
Such oscillations were not, however, uniformly associated with bundle
twitching.
Fig. 11.
Relation of twitches to the sensitivity of
mechanoelectrical transduction. A, Variable-amplitude
stimuli, applied to the base of a stimulus fiber, the tip of which was
attached to a hair bundle, elicited a family of receptor potentials.
The corresponding mechanical traces for this cell occur in Figure
5A. B, While the amplitude of the
receptor potential ( ) grew monotonically with the stimulus size, the
twitch's amplitude ( ) peaked for a bundle displacement near 40 nm.
C, The twitch's amplitude ( ) is plotted against
bundle displacement for another hair cell. As a measure of the
sensitivity of mechanoelectrical transduction, the plot includes the
derivative of the receptor potential's slope as a function of bundle
displacement ( ). The initial slope of the receptor potential was
determined by measuring the increment in electrical response between
successive points separated by a 400 µsec sampling interval.
D, The relation between the estimated sensitivity of
mechanoelectrical transduction and twitch amplitude is approximately
linear; the minimal squared error line through the origin is associated
with a correlation coefficient r = 0.74. A represents the results from 15 step displacements
uniformly spaced from 400 to 400 nm; the results from 10 stimulus
wave trains were averaged. The fiber's stiffness was 293 µN · m 1, and the cell's resting potential was 63
mV.
[View Larger Version of this Image (22K GIF file)]
To examine the displacement dependencies of the twitch and of
mechanoelectrical transduction, we stimulated a cell with positive
displacement pulses of various sizes and measured the twitch's
amplitude in relation to that of the receptor potential (Fig.
11B). The twitch reached its maximal size with bundle
displacements considerably smaller than those of 100-150 nm that
saturated the electrical response. The twitch peaked at approximately
the midpoint of the range of mechanical sensitivity, the bundle
position at which about half of the transduction channels were
open.
The receptor potential provided a somewhat distorted index of
mechanoelectrical transduction, because the electrical response was
filtered by the membrane's time constant and augmented by electrical
resonance. We therefore related the amplitude of the twitch to that of
the transduction current, which we estimated from the initial slope of
the receptor potential's rising phase. The twitch amplitude was
greatest near the point at which this slope changed most rapidly with
bundle displacement (Fig. 11C). To emphasize this point, we
plotted the twitch's amplitude against the rate at which the receptor
potential's slope changed as a function of bundle displacement. Within
the experimental uncertainty, the two responses were linearly related
(Fig. 11D). Taken together, these results confirmed that the
twitch peaked at bundle displacements for which the mechanoelectrical
transduction process was most sensitive.
Spontaneous hair bundle twitching
Twenty-three hair bundles exhibited spontaneous twitches; 20 of
these produced positively directed movements (Fig.
12A), the balance negative twitches.
Although it was difficult to distinguish small twitches from Brownian
motion, the amplitudes of spontaneous twitches ranged up to 42 nm. The
clearly identifiable spontaneous movements had durations of 3-10
msec.
Fig. 12.
Spontaneous twitching by hair bundles.
A, Rapid, positively directed twitches of amplitudes as
great as 30 nm were clearly distinct from the hair bundle's RMS
Brownian motion of ~2 nm. The propensity to twitch depended on a
bundle's holding position, which is shown to the lower
left of each trace. B, The same bundle's rate
of twitching was also sensitive to brief bundle displacements.
Especially during negative displacement pulses, twitching required tens
of milliseconds to resume. The bundle offsets were produced by 13 fiber
base excursions that were uniformly varied in amplitude from 350 to
350 nm. The fiber's stiffness was 310 µN · m 1.
C, In another hair cell, spontaneous twitching of the
hair bundle (top trace) was roughly synchronous with
transient membrane depolarizations (bottom trace); the
electrical responses may have been slightly delayed by the filtering
effect of the membrane's time constant. The responses were elicited by
a 60 nm base displacement of a fiber of stiffness 753 µN · m 1; the cell's resting potential was 45 mV.
The time calibrations of B and C are
identical.
[View Larger Version of this Image (34K GIF file)]
Spontaneous hair bundle motions varied widely in their regularity. Like
those observed earlier from hair bundles of the turtle's basilar
papilla (Crawford and Fettiplace, 1985 ) and the frog's sacculus
(Howard and Hudspeth, 1987a ), some movements were essentially
sinusoidal. Even when spontaneous twitching was not regularly periodic,
the average number of spikes in a given time period varied
systematically with a hair bundle's holding position. Spontaneous
twitches occurred over a range of bundle holding positions, with a
bell-shaped distribution of twitching rate centered somewhat positive
to the bundle's resting position. The rate of spontaneous twitching
during brief bundle displacements showed a similar sensitivity to
bundle position (Fig. 12B). After a positive bundle
deflection, the propensity to twitch transiently increased, then
declined to its resting level. Twitching was diminished during
maintained negative bundle displacements; the more negative the static
displacement, the longer it took for the rate of twitching to increase
to the resting level.
Spontaneous twitches were associated with stimulation of the
transduction elements, because transient membrane depolarizations
coincided with positive bundle movements (Fig. 12C).
The well defined time course of spontaneous twitches facilitates
calculation of the mechanical work performed by a bundle in their
production. When a bundle with a drag coefficient of 200 nN · sec · m 1 (Howard and Hudspeth, 1988 )
produced a 25 nm, triangle-wave twitch 5 msec in total duration (Fig.
12A), the energy dissipated against viscous drag was
~100 zJ (a zeptojoule is 10 21 J). By way of comparison,
this quantity approximately equals the free-energy change associated
with the hydrolysis of two ATP molecules or the movement of four
Ca2+ ions across the cell's membrane. If the elastic work
done during the twitch's rising phase was not recovered during the
falling phase, the energy used in performing work against the
stiffnesses of the bundle and stimulus fiber exceeded 900 zJ, the
equivalent of 20 molecules of ATP or the transmembrane flux of 40 Ca2+ ions.
DISCUSSION
Varieties of mechanical signals in the hair bundle
In conjunction with previous investigations, the present results
indicate that a hair bundle exhibits at least four distinct forms of
mechanical responsiveness. First, a bundle displays linear elasticity
evoked by stimuli of any duration. A bundle's passive stiffness, which
depends on the length and number of constituent stereocilia, is
300-4000 µN · m 1 (Flock and Strelioff, 1984a ,b;
Crawford and Fettiplace, 1985 ; Howard and Ashmore, 1986 ; Howard and
Hudspeth, 1987a ,b, 1988; Russell et al., 1992 ). The stiffness is
greatest for forces applied along the bundle's axis of symmetry and
mechanosensitivity (Fig. 3A) (Howard and Hudspeth, 1987a ).
About half of the work done in displacing a bundle along that axis
contributes to transduction-channel gating (Howard et al., 1988 ), with
the balance devoted to flexion of the actin fascicles at the basal
pivots of the stereocilia (Crawford and Fettiplace, 1985 ; Howard and
Ashmore, 1986 ).
A second mechanical response of the hair bundle reflects the gating of
mechanoelectrical transduction channels. Within a range of positions
near the bundle's resting point, the bundle's stiffness is less than
that when the bundle is displaced more extensively in the positive or
negative direction (Howard and Hudspeth, 1988 ; Russell et al., 1992 ;
van Netten and Khanna, 1994 ). This phenomenon, termed gating
compliance, reflects the fact that gating springs bear a significant
fraction of the tension in a bundle; as channels flicker between their
open and closed states, the time-averaged gating-spring tension
declines, and a bundle consequently becomes less stiff (for review, see
Hudspeth, 1992 ; Markin and Hudspeth, 1995 ).
A third, time-dependent change in the hair bundle's properties is
associated with adaptation of mechanoelectrical transduction to
sustained bundle deflection. After the initial movement reflecting its
passive elasticity, a bundle displaced by a flexible fiber gradually
relaxes toward its steady-state position (Fig. 2) (Howard and Hudspeth,
1987a ; Russell et al., 1989 ); the time constant of this relaxation,
~25 msec, corresponds to that for adaptation of the electrical
response (Eatock et al., 1987 ; Crawford et al., 1989 ; Assad and Corey,
1992 ). Maintaining a bundle's deflection constant with a displacement
clamp system demonstrates that the bundle exerts a force that declines
with similar kinetics (Fig. 10) (Jaramillo and Hudspeth, 1993 ). These
mechanical measurements reflect an adjustment of the bundle's chord
stiffness during adaptation (Hudspeth, 1992 ) consistent with the
re-setting of gating-spring tension by a myosin-based motor (for
review, see Hudspeth and Gillespie, 1994 ). Consistent with this model,
myosin I occurs near the stereociliary tips (Gillespie et al.,
1993 ), the site of transduction (Hudspeth, 1982 ; Jaramillo and
Hudspeth, 1991 ; Denk et al., 1995 ; Lumpkin and Hudspeth, 1995 ).
Moreover, adaptation is blocked by nucleotide analogs that interfere
with myosin's ATPase cycle (Gillespie and Hudspeth, 1993 ) and by
calmodulin inhibitors that interrupt Ca2+ modulation of
myosin's activity (Walker and Hudspeth, 1996 ).
The present results delineate a fourth type of mechanical response from
the hair bundle, rapid twitching evoked by stimulation. Movements of
this sort have previously been observed from hair bundles of the
bullfrog's sacculus (Howard and Hudspeth, 1987a ,b, 1988; Jaramillo et
al., 1990 ). Mechanically evoked bundle motions have also been seen in
the turtle's basilar papilla (Crawford and Fettiplace, 1985 ); perhaps
because relatively long stimulus fibers limited the frequency response
of those measurements, however, twitches were not reported in that
study.
In the present experiments, abrupt deflection of a bundle along
its axis of mechanical sensitivity was followed immediately by an
active movement comprising at least two phases, the first in the
direction of the stimulus and the second opposite it. Simultaneous
measurements of the receptor potential revealed an associated
depolarizing transient. Furthermore, the twitch's magnitude was
maximal over the range of stimulus displacements for which transduction
was most sensitive. Because twitching was inhibited when transduction
channels were blocked with gentamicin (Fig. 3B), and because
it could not be elicited by stimulation perpendicular to the bundle's
axis of mechanosensitivity (Fig. 3A), the twitch response
seems intimately related to the mechanoelectrical transduction process.
This linkage is strengthened by the observation that a bundle's
capacity to twitch accumulated with a time course characteristic of
adaptation (Figs. 8B, 9B). In addition, the range
of bundle positions over which a twitch could be elicited (Fig.
7B) resembled that over which adaptation is effective
(Shepherd and Corey, 1994 ). The adaptation process therefore appears to
poise the twitch-producing apparatus in readiness to make active
movements.
Possible mechanisms of the twitch
Two simple models offer insight into the twitch's origin. Both
suppose that the twitch is caused by a brief decrease in average
gating-spring tension followed immediately by a transient increase. The
results of our displacement clamp experiments support this notion: the
twitch's two phases correspond to, respectively, a decrease and an
increase in the force exerted by the bundle against the stimulus fiber
(Fig. 10).
The first model is based on the activity of mechanoelectrical
transduction channels (Howard and Hudspeth, 1988 ; Jaramillo et al.,
1990 ). If a large fraction of these channels were to open
simultaneously just after a positive bundle deflection, the average
gating-spring tension would decrease as the channels' gates assumed
their open conformation. Concerted channel closing would conversely
increase the tension in the gating springs and pull the bundle in the
negative direction. If a transduction channel occurs at one end of each
tip link, the conformational change associated with the opening of its
gate is 4 nm (Howard and Hudspeth, 1988 ); if there are channels at each
end of a link, the estimated motion is 2 nm (Denk et al., 1995 ).
Considering the geometrical gain of the bundle, 0.14 (Howard and
Hudspeth, 1988 ), concerted channel gating could in either case move an
unrestrained bundle ~30 nm, which is near the amplitude of the
largest evoked twitches that we observed.
The bundle's adaptation motors provide an alternative means of
effecting a rapid decrease and increase in gating-spring tension. It is
plausible that myosin molecules at the insertional plaque respond to a
stretch stimulus, such as bundle deflection, by tilting their heads
(Huxley and Simmons, 1971 ) and thus reducing gating-spring tension.
Such a reversal of the power stroke can proceed rapidly, with a rate
constant of 1500 sec 1 in muscle fibers (Lombardi et al.,
1995 ). A subsequent power stroke would increase the gating-spring
tension, pulling the bundle back in the negative direction. Given a
power stroke of ~11 nm (for review, see Huxley, 1990 ) and the
bundle's geometrical gain, synchronous rocking of myosin heads could
move an unrestrained bundle as much as 80 nm.
On the basis of either of these models, the sensitivity of
mechanoelectrical transduction should be proportional to twitch
magnitude. Our results (Fig. 11D) are consistent with this
prediction, but a more direct assessment of the transduction current,
under voltage-clamp conditions, will be necessary before a firm
conclusion can be drawn. Such experiments should also differentiate
between the two models. By the channel-gating model, the time course of
the transduction current should follow that of the twitch's rising and
falling components. The gates of transduction channels would be
required, not only to close despite elevated gating-spring tension, but
also to further augment this tension in an energy-requiring process. On
the other hand, the adaptation motor model suggests that gating-spring
tension should be increased, and channels should therefore remain open
while motors pull the bundle back in the negative direction. Of course,
the twitch's mechanism may be more complicated than either of the two
models described above: transduction-channel gating and myosin-head
tilting may operate in combination, with contributions from other hair
bundle constituents as well.
Implications for amplification of inputs by hair cells
While producing a twitch movement against an elastic stimulus
fiber and viscous drag, a hair bundle must perform mechanical work. The
twitch therefore signals an active process capable of dissipating
energy, presumably that derived from hydrolysis of ATP or from an ionic
gradient. This behavior is of interest in light of the demonstrated
amplificatory capacity of various auditory receptor organs. In the
mammalian cochlea, for example, amplification is a nonlinear process
that increases sensitivity to small stimuli and improves frequency
selectivity (for review, see Ruggero, 1992 ). Outer hair cells are
thought to effect amplification by voltage-driven contractions of their
somata (for review, see Dallos, 1992 ). Our results indicate that evoked
hair-bundle motility is also associated with increased sensitivity of
transduction (Fig. 11). Bundle twitching might therefore enhance the
responsiveness of hair cells in auditory and vestibular receptor organs
(Howard and Hudspeth, 1988 ) (for review, see Hudspeth, 1989 ), perhaps
including the mammalian cochlea.
Intense amplification of mechanical signals likely underlies
spontaneous otoacoustical emissions (for review, see Probst, 1990 ).
Hair bundles exhibit spontaneous twitching of an amplitude well in
excess of Brownian motion (Fig. 12) (see also Crawford and Fettiplace,
1985 ; Howard and Hudspeth, 1987a ; Denk et al., 1989 ); it is therefore
possible that bundles produce spontaneous otoacoustical emissions.
To participate in amplification and otoacoustical emissions, hair
bundle motility would be required to accentuate the motion of accessory
structures such as tectorial and basilar membranes. At least in the
sacculus, hair bundles are rigid enough to move the overlying otolithic
membrane (Benser et al., 1993 ); if they occurred simultaneously in
numerous cells, the observed hair bundle twitches could produce
sufficient force to displace this accessory structure. Although the
stiffnesses of the cochlea's tectorial and basilar membranes remain
uncertain, they may resemble that of the otolithic membrane (Gummer et
al., 1981 ). If so, twitches or oscillations by the hair bundles of
outer hair cells could affect basilar membrane movement and might thus
contribute to the cochlea's sensitivity and sharpness of tuning.
FOOTNOTES
Received April 24, 1996; revised June 27, 1996; accepted July 2, 1996.
M.E.B. and R.E.M. contributed equally to this research. Begun at
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, this work was
supported by National Institutes of Health Grant DC00317. A.J.H. is an
Investigator of Howard Hughes Medical Institute. We thank Dr. J. Howard
for advice about mechanical measurements and for access to his previous
experimental results, Dr. L. F. A. Jaramillo for suggestions about
displacement clamp recording, Dr. K. Behbehani for assistance with
stabilization of the displacement clamp system, and Dr. J. M. Phelps
for computer programming. Drs. L. Avery, S. T. Brady, D. W. Hilgemann,
and J. Howard and members of our research group kindly provided
comments on this manuscript; the two reviewers' five-page critique
also focused our thoughts.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. A. J. Hudspeth, Howard Hughes
Medical Institute and Laboratory of Sensory Neuroscience, Box 314, The
Rockefeller University, 1230 York Avenue, New York, NY 10021-6399.
Dr. Benser's current address: Guidant Corporation, 4100 Hamline Avenue
North, St. Paul, MN 55112-5798.
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