Literature DB >> 23426697

Tuning and timing in mammalian type I hair cells and calyceal synapses.

Jocelyn E Songer1, Ruth Anne Eatock.   

Abstract

Afferent nerve fibers in the central zones of vestibular epithelia form calyceal endings around type I hair cells and have phasic response properties that emphasize fast head motions. We investigated how stages from hair-cell transduction to calyceal spiking contribute tuning and timing to central (striolar)-zone afferents of the rat saccular epithelium. In an excised preparation, we deflected individual hair bundles with rigid probes driven with steps and sinusoids (0.5-500 Hz) and recorded whole-cell responses from hair cells and calyces at room temperature and body temperature. In immature hair cells and calyces (postnatal days (P)1-P4), tuning sharpened at each stage. Transducer adaptation and membrane-charging time produced bandpass filtering of the receptor potential with best frequencies of 10-30 Hz and phase leads below 10 Hz. For small stimuli, electrical resonances sharply tuned the hair-cell membrane in the frequency range of 5-40 Hz. The synaptic delay of quantal transmission added a phase lag at frequencies above 10 Hz. The influence of spike thresholds at the calyceal spike initiation stage sharpened tuning and advanced response phase. Two additional mechanisms strongly advanced response phase above 10 Hz when present: (1) maturing (P7-P9) type I hair cells acquired low-voltage-activated channels that shortened the rise time of the receptor potential and (2) some calyces had nonquantal transmission with little synaptic delay. By reducing response time, the identified inner-ear mechanisms (transducer adaptation, low-voltage-activated channels, nonquantal transmission, and spike triggering) may compensate for transmission delays in vestibular reflex pathways and help stabilize posture and gaze during rapid head motions.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23426697      PMCID: PMC3857958          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4067-12.2013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  72 in total

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9.  Vestibular hair cells and afferents: two channels for head motion signals.

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  65 in total

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Review 3.  How does high-frequency sound or vibration activate vestibular receptors?

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5.  Efferent Inputs Are Required for Normal Function of Vestibular Nerve Afferents.

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Review 6.  Multiscale modeling of mechanotransduction in the utricle.

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7.  Efferent synaptic transmission at the vestibular type II hair cell synapse.

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9.  Models of utricular bouton afferents: role of afferent-hair cell connectivity in determining spike train regularity.

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10.  Vestibular Evoked Myographic Correlation.

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