Gillespie Peter G
Oregon Hearing Research Center and Vollum Institute, Oregon Health & Science University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Road, Portland, OR 97239, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2004 Dec 29;359(1452):1945-51. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2004.1564.
Twenty years ago, the description of hair-cell stereocilia as actin-rich structures led to speculation that myosin molecules participated in mechanical transduction in the inner ear. In 1987, Howard and Hudspeth proposed specifically that a myosin I might mediate adaptation of the transduction current carried by hair cells, the sensory cells of the ear. We exploited the myosin literature to design tests of this hypothesis and to show that the responsible isoform is myosin 1c. The identification of this myosin as the adaptation motor would have been impossible without thorough experimentation on other myosins, particularly muscle myosins. The sliding-filament hypothesis for muscle contraction has thus led to a detailed understanding of the behaviour of hair cells.
二十年前,毛细胞静纤毛被描述为富含肌动蛋白的结构,这引发了人们对肌球蛋白分子参与内耳机械转导的猜测。1987年,霍华德和哈德斯佩斯特别提出,一种肌球蛋白I可能介导耳的感觉细胞——毛细胞所携带的转导电流的适应性变化。我们利用关于肌球蛋白的文献来设计对这一假说的测试,并证明起作用的同种型是肌球蛋白1c。如果没有对其他肌球蛋白,尤其是肌肉肌球蛋白进行全面实验,就不可能确定这种肌球蛋白是适应性运动蛋白。因此,肌肉收缩的滑动丝假说使人们对毛细胞的行为有了详细的了解。