4.7 Article

Calcium- and otoferlin-dependent exocytosis by immature outer hair cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 8, Pages 1798-1803

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4653-07.2008

Keywords

cochlea; organ of Corti; outer hair cells; ribbon synapses; exocytosis; otoferlin

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Immature cochlear outer hair cells (OHCs) make transient synaptic contacts (ribbon synapses) with type I afferent nerve fibers, but direct evidence of synaptic vesicle exocytosis is still missing. We thus investigated calcium-dependent exocytosis in murine OHCs at postnatal day 2 (P2)-P3, a developmental stage when calcium current maximum amplitude was the highest. By using time-resolved patch-clamp capacitance measurements, we show that voltage step activation of L-type calcium channels triggers fast membrane capacitance increase. Capacitance increase displayed two kinetic components, which are likely to reflect two functionally distinct pools of synaptic vesicles, a readily releasable pool (RRP;tau = 79 ms) and a slowly releasable pool (tau = 870 ms). The RRP size and maximal release rate were estimated at similar to 1200 vesicles and similar to 15,000 vesicles/s, respectively. In addition, we found a linear relationship between capacitance increase and calcium influx, like in mature inner hair cells (IHCs). These results give strong support to the existence of efficient calcium-dependent neurotransmitter release in immature OHCs. Moreover, we show that immature OHCs, just like immature IHCs, are able to produce regenerative calcium-dependent action potentials that could trigger synaptic exocytosis in vivo. Finally, the evoked membrane capacitance increases were abolished in P2-P3 OHCs from mutant Otof(-/-) mice defective for otoferlin, despite normal calcium currents. We conclude that otoferlin, the putative major calcium sensor at IHC ribbon synapses, is essential to synaptic exocytosis in immature OHCs too.

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