Abstract

The outer hair cell is electromotile, its membrane motor identified as the protein SLC26a5 (prestin). An area motor model, based on two-state Boltzmann statistics, was developed about two decades ago and derives from the observation that outer hair cell surface area is voltage-dependent. Indeed, aside from the nonlinear capacitance imparted by the voltage sensor charge movement of prestin, linear capacitance (Clin) also displays voltage dependence as motors move between expanded and compact states. Naturally, motor surface area changes alter membrane capacitance. Unit linear motor capacitance fluctuation (δCsa) is on the order of 140 zeptofarads. A recent three-state model of prestin provides an alternative view, suggesting that voltage-dependent linear capacitance changes are not real but only apparent because the two component Boltzmann functions shift their midpoint voltages (Vh) in opposite directions during treatment with salicylate, a known competitor of required chloride binding. We show here using manipulations of nonlinear capacitance with both salicylate and chloride that an enhanced area motor model, including augmented δCsa by salicylate, can accurately account for our novel findings. We also show that although the three-state model implicitly avoids measuring voltage-dependent motor capacitance, it registers δCsa effects as a byproduct of its assessment of Clin, which increases during salicylate treatment as motors are locked in the expanded state. The area motor model, in contrast, captures the characteristics of the voltage dependence of δCsa, leading to a better understanding of prestin.

Highlights

  • The SLC26a5 outer hair cell motor drives electromechanical behavior of this sensory/effector cell

  • We and others have shown that salicylate in the absence of prestin has no measurable effects on membrane capacitance [23, 24]

  • The area motor model of OHC motor activity was based on biophysical evidence that OHC surface area increases upon hyperpolarization [13]

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Summary

Background

The SLC26a5 outer hair cell motor drives electromechanical behavior of this sensory/effector cell. An area motor model, based on two-state Boltzmann statistics, was developed about two decades ago and derives from the observation that outer hair cell surface area is voltage-dependent. Long before the molecular identification of the motor, two-state Boltzmann models of the motor incorporating state-dependent surface areas were developed (9 –12) These were founded on experimental evidence that surface area in the OHC is voltage-dependent [13]. In support of these models, we measured changes in specific membrane capacitance that corresponded to the distribution of motors, evidencing an increase in linear capacitance as more motors were driven into the expanded state by hyperpolarization [14]. We show how salicylate competition with chloride may result in state-dependent modification of specific membrane capacitance

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