Nuttall A L
J Acoust Soc Am. 1985 Jan;77(1):165-75. doi: 10.1121/1.392282.
Inner hair cell responses to sound were monitored while direct current was applied across the membranous labyrinth in the first turn of the guinea pig cochlea. The current injection electrodes were positioned in the scala vestibuli and on the round window membrane. Positive and negative current (less than 100 microA) caused changes in the sound-evoked dc receptor potentials which were dependent on the sound frequency and intensity. The frequencies most affected by this extracellular current were those comprising the "tip" portion of the inner hair cell frequency tuning characteristic (FTC). The influence of current increased with increasing frequency. Positive current increased the amount of dc receptor potential for the affected frequencies while negative current decreased the potential. Current-induced changes (on a percentage basis) were greater for low intensity sounds and the negative current direction. These frequency specific changes are evidenced as a loss in sensitivity for the tip area of the FTC and a downward shift of the inner hair cell characteristic frequency. Larger current levels (greater than 160 microA) cause more complex changes including unrecoverable loss of cell performance. In separate experiments positive and negative currents (less than 1.1 microA) were injected into the inner hair cell from the recording electrode during simultaneous measurement of the sound-evoked dc receptor potential. This condition caused a shift in IHC sensitivity that was independent of sound frequency and intensity. Positive current decreased the sensitivity of the level of the cell while negative current increased the responses. The effect of current level on sound-evoked dc receptor potential was nonlinear, as comparatively greater increases in cell response were observed for negative than decreases for positive current. The intracellular current injection results are accounted for by the mechano-resistive model of hair cell transduction, where nonlinear responses with current level may reflect outward rectification. Response changes induced by extracellular current are evidence of current effects on both inner and outer hair cells. The frequency and intensity dependences are hypothesized to represent voltage mediated control of inner hair cell response by the outer hair cells.
在豚鼠耳蜗第一圈的膜迷路施加直流电时,监测了内毛细胞对声音的反应。电流注入电极置于前庭阶和圆窗膜上。正向和负向电流(小于100微安)引起了声诱发的直流受体电位的变化,这些变化取决于声音的频率和强度。受这种细胞外电流影响最大的频率是那些构成内毛细胞频率调谐特性(FTC)“尖端”部分的频率。电流的影响随频率增加而增强。正向电流增加了受影响频率下的直流受体电位量,而负向电流则降低了该电位。电流诱导的变化(以百分比计)在低强度声音和负向电流方向时更大。这些频率特异性变化表现为FTC尖端区域的灵敏度损失以及内毛细胞特征频率的向下偏移。更大的电流水平(大于160微安)会导致更复杂的变化,包括细胞性能不可恢复的损失。在单独的实验中,在同时测量声诱发的直流受体电位期间,从记录电极向内毛细胞注入正向和负向电流(小于1.1微安)。这种情况导致内毛细胞灵敏度发生变化,该变化与声音频率和强度无关。正向电流降低了细胞水平的灵敏度,而负向电流增加了反应。电流水平对声诱发的直流受体电位的影响是非线性的,因为观察到负向电流引起的细胞反应增加相对大于正向电流引起的减少。细胞内电流注入结果由毛细胞转导的机械电阻模型解释,其中电流水平的非线性反应可能反映外向整流。细胞外电流诱导的反应变化证明了电流对内毛细胞和外毛细胞的影响。频率和强度依赖性被假设代表外毛细胞对电压介导的内毛细胞反应的控制。