4.7 Article

Fast Adaptation and Ca2+ Sensitivity of the Mechanotransducer Require Myosin-XVa in Inner But Not Outer Cochlear Hair Cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 29, Issue 13, Pages 4023-4034

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4566-08.2009

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Funding

  1. NIDCD NIH HHS [R01 DC008861, DC008861, R01 DC008861-01A2] Funding Source: Medline

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In inner ear hair cells, activation of mechanotransduction channels is followed by extremely rapid deactivation that depends on the influx of Ca2+ through these channels. Although the molecular mechanisms of this fast adaptation are largely unknown, the predominant models assume Ca2+ sensitivity as an intrinsic property of yet unidentified mechanotransduction channels. Here, we examined mechanotransduction in the hair cells of young postnatal shaker 2 mice (Myo15(sh2/sh2)). These mice have no functional myosin-XVa, which is critical for normal growth of mechanosensory stereocilia of hair cells. Although stereocilia of both inner and outer hair cells of Myo15(sh2/sh2) mice lack myosin-XVa and are abnormally short, these cells have dramatically different hair bundle morphology. Myo15(sh2/sh2) outer hair cells retain a staircase arrangement of the abnormally short stereocilia and prominent tip links. Myo15(sh2/sh2) inner hair cells do not have obliquely oriented tip links, and their mechanosensitivity is mediated exclusively by top-to-top links between equally short stereocilia. In both inner and outer hair cells of Myo15(sh2/sh2) mice, we found mechanotransduction responses with a normal wild-type amplitude and speed of activation. Surprisingly, only outer hair cells exhibit fast adaptation and sensitivity to extracellular Ca2+. In Myo15(sh2/sh2) inner hair cells, fast adaptation is disrupted and the transduction current is insensitive to extracellular Ca2+. We conclude that the Ca2+ sensitivity of the mechanotransduction channels and the fast adaptation require a structural environment that is dependent on myosin-XVa and is disrupted in Myo15(sh2/sh2) inner hair cells, but not in Myo15(sh2/sh2) outer hair cells.

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