Abstract

BackgroundHair cells in the auditory, vestibular, and lateral-line systems respond to mechanical stimulation and transmit information to afferent nerve fibers. The sensitivity of mechanoelectrical transduction is modulated by the efferent pathway, whose activity usually reduces the responsiveness of hair cells. The basis of this effect remains unknown.Methodology and Principal FindingsWe employed immunocytological, electrophysiological, and micromechanical approaches to characterize the anatomy of efferent innervation and the effect of efferent activity on the electrical and mechanical properties of hair cells in the bullfrog's sacculus. We found that efferent fibers form extensive synaptic terminals on all macular and extramacular hair cells. Macular hair cells expressing the Ca2+-buffering protein calretinin contain half as many synaptic ribbons and are innervated by twice as many efferent terminals as calretinin-negative hair cells. Efferent activity elicits inhibitory postsynaptic potentials in hair cells and thus inhibits their electrical resonance. In hair cells that exhibit spiking activity, efferent stimulation suppresses the generation of action potentials. Finally, efferent activity triggers a displacement of the hair bundle's resting position.Conclusions and SignificanceThe hair cells of the bullfrog's sacculus receive a rich efferent innervation with the heaviest projection to calretinin-containing cells. Stimulation of efferent axons desensitizes the hair cells and suppresses their spiking activity. Although efferent activation influences mechanoelectrical transduction, the mechanical effects on hair bundles are inconsistent.

Highlights

  • Hair cells in the acousticolateralis system are responsible for the detection of sound, acceleration, vibration, and water flow

  • We investigated the effect of efferent activity on the electrical properties of hair cells

  • While the basolateral surfaces of the hair cells were bathed in standard saline solution, their hair bundles were immersed in artificial endolymph containing 2 mM Na+, 118 mM K+, 0.25 mM Ca2+, 118 mM Cl2, 3 mM D-glucose, and 5 mM HEPES

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Summary

Introduction

Hair cells in the acousticolateralis system are responsible for the detection of sound, acceleration, vibration, and water flow. Both the high sensitivity and the sharp frequency selectivity in these cells rely upon an active process that supplies energy to the hair bundle, the hair cell’s mechanosensitive organelle. Efferent activation generally reduces the sensitivity of vestibular and auditory hair cells to mechanical stimulation. The sensitivity of mechanoelectrical transduction is modulated by the efferent pathway, whose activity usually reduces the responsiveness of hair cells. The basis of this effect remains unknown

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