Comparative transduction mechanisms of hair cells in the bullfrog utriculus. I. Responses to intracellular current
R. A. Baird Department of Neuro-otology, Good Samaritan Hospital and Medical Center, Portland, Oregon 97209. 1. Hair cells in whole-mount in vitro preparations of the utricular macula of the bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) were selected according to their macular location and hair bundle morphology. The...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1994-02, Vol.71 (2), p.666-684 |
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Zusammenfassung: | R. A. Baird
Department of Neuro-otology, Good Samaritan Hospital and Medical Center, Portland, Oregon 97209.
1. Hair cells in whole-mount in vitro preparations of the utricular macula
of the bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) were selected according to their macular
location and hair bundle morphology. The voltage responses of selected hair
cells to intracellular current steps and sinusoids in the frequency range
of 0.5-200 Hz were studied with conventional intracellular recordings. 2.
The utricular macula is divided into medial and lateral parts by the
striola, a 75- to 100-microns zone that runs for nearly the entire length
of the sensory macula near its lateral border. The striola is distinguished
from flanking extrastriolar regions by the elevated height of its apical
surface and the wider spacing of its hair cells. A line dividing hair cells
of opposing polarities, located near the lateral border of the striola,
separates it into medial and lateral parts. On average, the striola
consists of five to seven medial and two to three lateral rows of hair
cells. 3. Utricular hair cells were classified into four types on the basis
of hair bundle morphology. Type B cells, the predominant hair cell type in
the utricular macula, are small cells with short sterocilia and kinocilia
2-6 times as long as their longest stereocilia. These hair cells were found
throughout the extrastriola and, more rarely, in the striolar region. Three
other hair cell types were restricted to the striolar region. Type C cells,
found primarily in the outer striolar rows, resemble enlarged versions of
Type B hair cells. Type F cells have kinocilia approximately equal in
length to their longest stereocilia and are restricted to the middle
striolar rows. Type E cells, found only in the innermost striolar rows,
have short kinocilia with prominent kinociliary bulbs. 4. The resting
potential of 99 hair cells was -58.0 +/- 7.6 (SD) mV and did not vary
significantly for hair cells in differing macular locations or with
differing hair bundle morphology. The RN of hair cells, measured from the
voltage response to current steps, varied from 200 to > 2,000 M omega
and was not well correlated with cell size. On average, Type B cells had
the highest RN, followed by Type F, Type E, and Type C cells. When
normalized to their surface area, the membrane resistance of hair cells
ranged from < 1,000 to > 10,000 k omega.cm2. The input capacitance of
hair cells ranged from < 3 to > 15 pA, corresponding on average t |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1994.71.2.666 |