Laboratoire Physico-Chimie Curie, Institut Curie, PSL Research University, CNRS, UMR168, Paris, France; UPMC Université Paris 06, Sorbonne Universités, Paris, France.
Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems, Dresden, Germany; Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of California-Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California.
Biophys J. 2018 Jan 23;114(2):425-436. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2017.11.019.
Hair cells of the inner ear can power spontaneous oscillations of their mechanosensory hair bundle, resulting in amplification of weak inputs near the characteristic frequency of oscillation. Recently, dynamic force measurements have revealed that delayed gating of the mechanosensitive ion channels responsible for mechanoelectrical transduction produces a friction force on the hair bundle. The significance of this intrinsic source of dissipation for the dynamical process underlying active hair-bundle motility has remained elusive. The aim of this work is to determine the role of friction in spontaneous hair-bundle oscillations. To this end, we characterized key oscillation properties over a large ensemble of individual hair cells and measured how viscosity of the endolymph that bathes the hair bundles affects these properties. We found that hair-bundle movements were too slow to be impeded by viscous drag only. Moreover, the oscillation frequency was only marginally affected by increasing endolymph viscosity by up to 30-fold. Stochastic simulations could capture the observed behaviors by adding a contribution to friction that was 3-8-fold larger than viscous drag. The extra friction could be attributed to delayed changes in tip-link tension as the result of the finite activation kinetics of the transduction channels. We exploited our analysis of hair-bundle dynamics to infer the channel activation time, which was ∼1 ms. This timescale was two orders-of-magnitude shorter than the oscillation period. However, because the channel activation time was significantly longer than the timescale of mechanical relaxation of the hair bundle, channel kinetics affected hair-bundle dynamics. Our results suggest that friction from channel gating affects the waveform of oscillation and that the channel activation time can tune the characteristic frequency of the hair cell. We conclude that the kinetics of transduction channels' gating plays a fundamental role in the dynamic process that shapes spontaneous hair-bundle oscillations.
内耳毛细胞可以自主激发机械敏感毛束的振动,从而在接近其特征振荡频率的弱输入附近产生信号放大。最近,动态力测量揭示了机械敏感离子通道的延迟门控导致毛束产生摩擦力,而这些离子通道负责机械电转换。这种内在的耗散源对于主动毛束运动的动力学过程的意义仍然难以捉摸。这项工作的目的是确定摩擦力在自发毛束振动中的作用。为此,我们在大量单个毛细胞中对关键的振荡特性进行了表征,并测量了包裹毛束的内淋巴的粘性如何影响这些特性。我们发现,毛束的运动速度太慢,不能仅通过粘性阻力来阻碍。此外,通过将内淋巴的粘性增加高达 30 倍,振荡频率仅略有变化。随机模拟通过添加比粘性阻力大 3-8 倍的摩擦力贡献,就可以捕捉到观察到的行为。额外的摩擦力可以归因于作为转导通道有限激活动力学结果的连接尖端张力的延迟变化。我们利用对毛束动力学的分析来推断通道激活时间,约为 1 毫秒。这个时间尺度比振荡周期短两个数量级。然而,由于通道激活时间比毛束的机械弛豫时间长得多,因此通道动力学会影响毛束的动力学。我们的研究结果表明,来自通道门控的摩擦力会影响振动的波形,并且通道激活时间可以调整毛细胞的特征频率。我们得出结论,转导通道门控的动力学在塑造自发毛束振动的动态过程中起着至关重要的作用。