Dallos P, Evans B N
Department of Neurobiology and Physiology, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208, USA.
Science. 1995 Mar 31;267(5206):2006-9. doi: 10.1126/science.7701325.
Outer hair cells undergo somatic elongation-contraction cycles in vitro when electrically stimulated. This "electromotile" response is assumed to underlie the high sensitivity and frequency selectivity of amplification in the mammalian cochlea. This process, presumably operating on a cycle-by-cycle basis at the frequency of the stimulus, is believed to provide mechanical feedback in vivo. However, if driven by the receptor potential of the cell, the mechanical feedback is expected to be severely attenuated at high frequencies because of electrical low-pass filtering by the outer hair cell basolateral membrane. It is proposed that electromotility at high frequencies is driven instead by extracellular potential gradients across the hair cell, and it is shown that this driving voltage is not subject to low-pass filtering and is sufficiently large. It is further shown that if the filtering properties of the cell membrane are canceled, taking advantage of the electrical characteristics of isolated outer hair cells in a partitioning glass microchamber, then the lower bound of the motor's bandwidth is approximately 22 kilohertz, a number determined only by the limitations of our instrumentation.
体外电刺激时,外毛细胞会经历体细胞伸长 - 收缩循环。这种“电运动”反应被认为是哺乳动物耳蜗放大作用的高灵敏度和频率选择性的基础。据推测,这一过程在体内以刺激频率逐周期运行,被认为能提供机械反馈。然而,如果由细胞的感受器电位驱动,由于外毛细胞基底外侧膜的电低通滤波作用,高频时机械反馈预计会严重衰减。有人提出,高频时的电运动是由毛细胞上的细胞外电位梯度驱动的,并且表明这种驱动电压不受低通滤波影响且足够大。进一步表明,如果利用分隔玻璃微腔中分离的外毛细胞的电学特性消除细胞膜的滤波特性,那么该运动器带宽的下限约为22千赫兹,这个数字仅由我们仪器的局限性决定。