TY - JOUR T1 - Gating of Acoustic Transducer Channels Is Shaped by Biomechanical Filter Processes JF - The Journal of Neuroscience JO - J. Neurosci. SP - 2377 LP - 2382 DO - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3948-15.2016 VL - 36 IS - 8 AU - Jennifer Hummel AU - Stefan Schöneich AU - Manfred Kössl AU - Jan Scherberich AU - Berthold Hedwig AU - Simone Prinz AU - Manuela Nowotny Y1 - 2016/02/24 UR - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/36/8/2377.abstract N2 - Mechanoelectrical transduction of acoustic signals is the fundamental process for hearing in all ears across the animal kingdom. Here, we performed in vivo laser-vibrometric and electrophysiological measurements at the transduction site in an insect ear (Mecopoda elongata) to relate the biomechanical tonotopy along the hearing organ to the frequency tuning of the corresponding sensory cells. Our mechanical and electrophysiological map revealed a biomechanical filter process that considerably sharpens the neuronal response. We demonstrate that the channel gating, which acts on chordotonal stretch receptor neurons, is based on a mechanical directionality of the sound-induced motion. Further, anatomical studies of the transduction site support our finding of a stimulus-relevant tilt. In conclusion, we were able to show, in an insect ear, that directionality of channel gating considerably sharpens the neuronal frequency selectivity at the peripheral level and have identified a mechanism that enhances frequency discrimination in tonotopically organized ears.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The evolutionarily conserved ability of sensory cells to sense sound-induced mechanical forces is a fundamental process that still need investigating. In ears, the transduction process of acoustic signals from sound to frequency-specific neuronal responses of sensory cells is based on the opening of mechanosensitive ion channels. Here, we investigated mechanotransduction in the katydid's hearing organ with in vivo measurements of the sound-induced mechanical stimulus and of the electrical responses of the sensory cell at the transduction site. By combining anatomical, biophysical, and neurophysiological data, we present for the first time evidence of a crucial frequency-filter mechanism integral to the channel gating process. This filter takes effect at the first step of the signal transduction chain and shapes behavior-relevant hearing information. ER -