4.7 Article

A Gap-Junction Mutation Reveals That Outer Hair Cell Extracellular Receptor Potentials Drive High-Frequency Cochlear Amplification

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 42, Issue 42, Pages 7875-7884

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2241-21.2022

Keywords

cochlea; cochlear amplifier; Connexin 30; gap junction; outer hair cell; receptor potential

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Cochlear amplification is achieved through the voltage-dependent electromotility of mechanosensory outer hair cells, which amplifies low-to-moderate level sounds and compresses loud sounds. This study investigates the role of receptor potentials and electrical properties of outer hair cells in high-frequency hearing. The results suggest that extracellular receptor potentials, rather than receptor potentials, drive outer hair cell motility and cochlear amplification at high frequencies.
Cochlear amplification enables the enormous dynamic range of hearing through amplifying cochlear responses to low-to moderate-level sounds and compressing them to loud sounds. Amplification is attributed to voltage-dependent electromotility of mechanosensory outer hair cells (OHCs) driven by changing voltages developed across their cell membranes. At low fre-quencies, these voltage changes are dominated by intracellular receptor potentials (RPs). However, OHC membranes have electrical low-pass filter properties that attenuate high-frequency RPs, which should potentially attenuate amplification of high-frequency cochlear responses and impede high-frequency hearing. We made in vivo intracellular and extracellular elec-trophysiological measurements from the organ of Corti of male and female mice of the CBA/J strain, with excellent high -fre-quency hearing, and from the CD-1 mouse strain, which has sensitive hearing below 12 kHz but loses high-frequency hearing within a few weeks postpartum. The CD-1 mouse strain was transfected with an A88V mutation of the connexin 30 gap -junc-tion protein. By blocking the action of the GJ protein to reduce input resistance, the mutation increased the OHC extracellu-lar RP (ERP) magnitude and rescued high-frequency hearing. However, by increasing the organ of Corti resistance, the mutation rescued high-frequency hearing through preserving the OHC extracellular RP (ERP) magnitude. We measured the voltage developed across the basolateral membranes of OHCs, which controls their electromotility, for low-to high-frequency sounds in male and female mice of the CD-1 strain that expressed the A88V mutation. We demonstrate that ERPs, not RPs, drive OHC motility and cochlear amplification at high frequencies because at high frequencies, ERPs are not frequency atte-nuated, exceed RPs in magnitude, and are appropriately timed to provide cochlear amplification.

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