The transduction channel filter in auditory hair cells

AJ Ricci, HJ Kennedy, AC Crawford… - Journal of …, 2005 - Soc Neuroscience
AJ Ricci, HJ Kennedy, AC Crawford, R Fettiplace
Journal of Neuroscience, 2005Soc Neuroscience
In the first step in auditory transduction, sound-induced vibrations of the stereociliary
bundles on the sensory hair cells are converted into electrical signals by opening of
mechanotransducer channels. Faithful transduction and hence auditory performance will be
limited by the kinetic properties of these channels. We have measured the time course of
mechanotransducer currents in turtle and rat auditory hair cells during rapid deflections of
the hair bundle. Current activation in the turtle had a time constant that decreased 10-fold …
In the first step in auditory transduction, sound-induced vibrations of the stereociliary bundles on the sensory hair cells are converted into electrical signals by opening of mechanotransducer channels. Faithful transduction and hence auditory performance will be limited by the kinetic properties of these channels. We have measured the time course of mechanotransducer currents in turtle and rat auditory hair cells during rapid deflections of the hair bundle. Current activation in the turtle had a time constant that decreased 10-fold with stimulus amplitude to a limiting value of ∼50 μs. Lowering the external Ca2+ concentration slowed both activation and adaptation time constants. Similar effects were seen in hair cells tuned to low and high frequencies, but the overall kinetics was slower in low-frequency cells. In rat outer hair cells, the time courses of both activation and adaptation were at least 10-fold faster. Although activation kinetics was too fast to characterize accurately, the adaptation time constants in the rat, like the turtle, were Ca2+ dependent and faster in hair cells tuned to higher frequencies. The results imply that mechanotransducer channels operate similarly in turtle and rat but are faster in the mammal to accommodate its higher frequency range of hearing. We suggest that the kinetics of channel activation and adaptation imposes a bandpass filter on transduction, with a center frequency matched to the frequencies detected by the hair cell, which may improve the signal-to-noise ratio near threshold.
Soc Neuroscience