Abstract

Adaptation in a vestibular organ, the bullfrog's sacculus, was studied in vivo and in vitro. In the in vivo experiments, the discharge of primary saccular neurons and the extracellular response of saccular hair cells were recorded during steps of linear acceleration. The saccular neurons responded at the onset of the acceleration steps, then adapted fully within 10-50 msec. The extracellular (microphonic) response of the hair cells adapted with a similar time course, indicating that the primary sources of the neural adaptation are peripheral to the afferent synapse--in the hair cell, its mechanical inputs, or both. Evidence for hair cell adaptation was provided by 2 in vitro preparations: after excising the sacculus and removing the accessory structures, we recorded either the extracellular hair cell response to displacement of the otolithic membrane or the intracellular hair cell response to hair bundle displacement. In both cases the response to a step stimulus adapted. The adaptation involved a shift in the displacement-response curve along the displacement axis, so that the cell's operating point was reset toward the static position of its hair bundle. This displacement shift occurred in response to both depolarizing and hyperpolarizing stimuli. Its time course varied among cells, from tens to hundreds of milliseconds, and also varied with the concentration of Ca2+ bathing the apical surfaces of the hair cells. Voltage-clamp experiments suggested that the displacement shift does not depend simply on ion entry through the hair cell's transduction channels and can occur at a fixed membrane potential. The possible role of the displacement-shift process in the function of the frog's sacculus as a very sensitive vibration detector is discussed.

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