Department of Otolaryngology, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94304.
Department of Otolaryngology, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94304
J Neurosci. 2024 Jan 3;44(1):e1298232023. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1298-23.2023.
Information about dynamic head motion is conveyed by a central "striolar" zone of vestibular hair cells and afferent neurons in the inner ear. How vestibular hair cells are tuned to transduce dynamic stimuli at the molecular level is not well understood. Here we take advantage of the differential expression pattern of , , and , which encode channel subunits of the mechanotransduction complex in zebrafish vestibular hair cells. To test the role of various combinations of Tmc subunits in transducing dynamic head movements, we measured reflexive eye movements induced by high-frequency stimuli in single versus double mutants. We found that Tmc2a function correlates with the broadest range of frequency sensitivity, whereas Tmc2b mainly contributes to lower-frequency responses. Tmc1, which is largely excluded from the striolar zone, plays a minor role in sensing lower-frequency stimuli. Our study suggests that the Tmc subunits impart functional differences to the mechanotransduction of dynamic stimuli. Information about dynamic head movements is transmitted by sensory receptors, known as hair cells, in the labyrinth of the inner ear. The sensitivity of hair cells to fast or slow movements of the head differs according to cell type. Whether the mechanotransduction complex that converts mechanical stimuli into electrical signals in hair cells participates in conveying frequency information is not clear. Here we find that the genes, which encode a central component of the complex, are differentially expressed in the utricle and contribute to frequency sensitivity in zebrafish.
内耳迷路中的感觉受体(毛细胞)将有关头部动态运动的信息进行传递。毛细胞对头部快速或缓慢运动的敏感性因细胞类型而异。参与将机械刺激转换为电信号的机械转导复合物是否参与传递频率信息尚不清楚。在这里,我们发现编码该复合物核心组件的 基因在耳石中有差异表达,并对斑马鱼的频率敏感性有贡献。