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1.
The inner ear converts sound waves into hearing signals through the mechanoelectrical transduction (MET) process. Deflection of the stereocilia bundle of hair cells causes the opening of channels that allow the entry of endolymph K+ and Ca2+. Ca2+ that enters is crucial to the hearing process and is exported to the endolymph by the plasma membrane Ca2+ pump (isoform PMCA2w/a): disturbances of the balance between Ca2+ penetration and ejection, e.g. by pump mutations, generate deafness. Hearing loss caused by PMCA defects is frequently exacerbated by mutations in cadherin 23, a single pass stereociliar Ca2+ binding protein that forms the tip links which permit the deflection of the stereocilia bundle and thus the opening of the MET channels. The PMCA2w/a pump ejects Ca2+ to the endolymph even in the absence of the natural activator calmodulin. This satisfies the special Ca2+ homeostasis requirements of the stereocilia/endolymph system. Here we have analyzed a mice and a human previously described pump mutant. The human mutant only exacerbated the deafness produced by a cadherin 23 mutation. The murine mutant overexpressed in model cells displayed an evident defect both in the basal activity of the pump and in the long range ejection of Ca2+, the human mutant instead failed to impair the Ca2+ ejection by the pump.  相似文献   

2.
Sound detection by inner ear hair cells requires tip links that interconnect mechanosensory stereocilia and convey force to yet unidentified transduction channels. Current models postulate a static composition of the tip link, with protocadherin 15 (PCDH15) at the lower and cadherin 23 (CDH23) at the upper end of the link. In terminally differentiated mammalian auditory hair cells, tip links are subjected to sound-induced forces throughout an organism''s life. Although hair cells can regenerate disrupted tip links and restore hearing, the molecular details of this process are unknown. We developed a novel implementation of backscatter electron scanning microscopy to visualize simultaneously immuno-gold particles and stereocilia links, both of only a few nanometers in diameter. We show that functional, mechanotransduction-mediating tip links have at least two molecular compositions, containing either PCDH15/CDH23 or PCDH15/PCDH15. During regeneration, shorter tip links containing nearly equal amounts of PCDH15 at both ends appear first. Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings demonstrate that these transient PCDH15/PCDH15 links mediate mechanotransduction currents of normal amplitude but abnormal Ca2+-dependent decay (adaptation). The mature PCDH15/CDH23 tip link composition is re-established later, concomitant with complete recovery of adaptation. Thus, our findings provide a molecular mechanism for regeneration and maintenance of mechanosensory function in postmitotic auditory hair cells and could help identify elusive components of the mechanotransduction machinery.  相似文献   

3.
Substantial evidence exists for spontaneous oscillations of hair cell stereociliary bundles in the lower vertebrate inner ear. Since the oscillations are larger than expected from Brownian motion, they must result from an active process in the stereociliary bundle suggested to underlie amplification of the sensory input as well as spontaneous otoacoustic emissions. However, their low frequency (<100 Hz) makes them unsuitable for amplification in birds and mammals that hear up to 5 kHz or higher. To examine the possibility of high-frequency oscillations, we used a finite-element model of the outer hair cell bundle incorporating previously measured mechanical parameters. Bundle motion was assumed to activate mechanotransducer channels according to the gating spring hypothesis, and the channels were regulated adaptively by Ca2+ binding. The model generated oscillations of freestanding bundles at 4 kHz whose sharpness of tuning depended on the mechanotransducer channel number and location, and the Ca2+ concentration. Entrainment of the oscillations by external stimuli was used to demonstrate nonlinear amplification. The oscillation frequency depended on channel parameters and was increased to 23 kHz principally by accelerating Ca2+ binding kinetics. Spontaneous oscillations persisted, becoming very narrow-band, when the hair bundle was loaded with a tectorial membrane mass.  相似文献   

4.
The sensitivity of our hearing is enhanced by an active process that both amplifies and tunes the movements of the ear's sensory receptors, the hair cells. In a quiet environment, the active process can even evoke spontaneous emission of sounds from an ear. Recent research indicates that, at least in non-mammalian tetrapods, the active process results from the interaction of negative stiffness in the mechanosensitive hair bundles with two motor processes, one due to myosin-based adaptation and the other to Ca2+ -dependent reclosure of transduction channels. These three processes together explain many of the complex phenomena characteristic of the hearing process.  相似文献   

5.
Brain-specific angiogenesis inhibitor 1-associated protein 2-like protein 2 (BAIAP2L2), a membrane-binding protein required for the maintenance of mechanotransduction in hair cells, is selectively retained at the tips of transducing stereocilia. BAIAP2L2 trafficked to stereocilia tips in the absence of EPS8, but EPS8 increased the efficiency of localization. A tripartite complex of BAIAP2L2, EPS8, and MYO15A formed efficiently in vitro, and these three proteins robustly targeted to filopodia tips when coexpressed in cultured cells. Mice lacking functional transduction channels no longer concentrated BAIAP2L2 at row 2 stereocilia tips, a result that was phenocopied by blocking channels with tubocurarine in cochlear explants. Transduction channels permit Ca2+ entry into stereocilia, and we found that membrane localization of BAIAP2L2 was enhanced in the presence of Ca2+. Finally, reduction of intracellular Ca2+ in hair cells using BAPTA-AM led to a loss of BAIAP2L2 at stereocilia tips. Taken together, our results show that a MYO15A-EPS8 complex transports BAIAP2L2 to stereocilia tips, and Ca2+ entry through open channels at row 2 tips retains BAIAP2L2 there.  相似文献   

6.
Ca2+-dependent inactivation (CDI) is a negative feedback regulation of voltage-gated Cav1 and Cav2 channels that is mediated by the Ca2+ sensing protein, calmodulin (CaM), binding to the pore-forming Cav α1 subunit. David Yue and his colleagues made seminal contributions to our understanding of this process, as well as factors that regulate CDI. Important in this regard are members of a family of Ca2+ binding proteins (CaBPs) that are related to calmodulin. CaBPs are expressed mainly in neural tissues and can antagonize CaM-dependent CDI for Cav1 L-type channels. This review will focus on the roles of CaBPs as Cav1-interacting proteins, and the significance of these interactions for vision, hearing, and neuronal Ca2+ signaling events.  相似文献   

7.
The major players in the processes of cellular mechanotransduction are considered to be mechanosensitive (MS) or mechano-gated ion channels. Non-selective Ca2+-permeable channels, whose activity is directly controlled by membrane stretch (stretch-activated channels, SACs) are ubiquitously present in mammalian cells of different origin. Ca2+ entry mediated by SACs presumably has a significant impact on various Ca2+-dependent intracellular and membrane processes. It was proposed that SACs could play a crucial role in the different cellular reactions and pathologies, including oncotransformation, increased metastatic activity and invasion of malignant cells. In the present work, coupling of ion channels in transformed fibroblasts in course of stretch activation was explored with the use of patch-clamp technique. The combination of cell-attached and inside-out single-current experiments showed that Ca2+ influx via SACs triggered the activity of Ca2+-sensitive K+ channels indicating functional compartmentalization of different channel types in plasma membrane. Importantly, the analysis of single channel behavior demonstrated that K+ currents could be activated by the rise of intracellular calcium but displayed no direct mechanosensitivity. Taken together, our data imply that local changes in Ca2+ concentration due to SAC activity may provide a functional link between various Ca2+-dependent molecules in the processes of cellular mechanotransduction.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Vilfan A  Duke T 《Biophysical journal》2008,95(10):4622-4630
Spontaneous otoacoustic emissions (SOAEs) are indicators of an active process in the inner ear that enhances the sensitivity and frequency selectivity of hearing. They are particularly regular and robust in certain lizards, so these animals are good model organisms for studying how SOAEs are generated. We show that the published properties of SOAEs in the bobtail lizard are wholly consistent with a mathematical model in which active oscillators, with exponentially varying characteristic frequencies, are coupled together in a chain by visco-elastic elements. Physically, each oscillator corresponds to a small group of hair cells, covered by a tectorial sallet, so our theoretical analysis directly links SOAEs to the micromechanics of active hair bundles.  相似文献   

10.
Calcium ions (Ca2+) regulate numerous and diverse aspects of cochlear and vestibular physiology. This review focuses on the Ca2+ control of mechanotransduction and synaptic transmission in sensory hair cells, as well as on Ca2+ signalling in non-sensory cells of the developing cochlea.  相似文献   

11.
The cell membranes in the hair bundle of an auditory hair cell confront a difficult task as the bundle oscillates in response to sound: for efficient mechanotransduction, all the component stereocilia of the hair bundle must move essentially in unison, shearing at their tips yet maintaining contact without membrane fusion. One mechanism by which this cohesion might occur is counterion-mediated attachment between glycan components of apposed stereociliary membranes. Using capillary electrophoresis, we showed that the stereociliary glycocalyx acts as a negatively charged polymer brush. We found by force-sensing photomicrometry that the stereocilia formed elastic connections with one another to various degrees depending on the surrounding ionic environment and the presence of N-linked sugars. Mg2+ was a more potent mediator of attachment than was Ca2+. The forces between stereocilia produced chaotic stick-slip behavior. These results indicate that counterion-mediated interactions in the glycocalyx contribute to the stereociliary coherence that is essential for hearing.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The active zone of presynaptic nerve terminals organizes the neurotransmitter release machinery, thereby enabling fast Ca2+‐triggered synaptic vesicle exocytosis. BK‐channels are Ca2+‐activated large‐conductance K+‐channels that require close proximity to Ca2+‐channels for activation and control Ca2+‐triggered neurotransmitter release by accelerating membrane repolarization during action potential firing. How BK‐channels are recruited to presynaptic Ca2+‐channels, however, is unknown. Here, we show that RBPs (for RIM‐binding proteins), which are evolutionarily conserved active zone proteins containing SH3‐ and FN3‐domains, directly bind to BK‐channels. We find that RBPs interact with RIMs and Ca2+‐channels via their SH3‐domains, but to BK‐channels via their FN3‐domains. Deletion of RBPs in calyx of Held synapses decreased and decelerated presynaptic BK‐currents and depleted BK‐channels from active zones. Our data suggest that RBPs recruit BK‐channels into a RIM‐based macromolecular active zone complex that includes Ca2+‐channels, synaptic vesicles, and the membrane fusion machinery, thereby enabling tight spatio‐temporal coupling of Ca2+‐influx to Ca2+‐triggered neurotransmitter release in a presynaptic terminal.  相似文献   

14.
Ca(2+) acts as a fundamental signal transduction element in inner ear, delivering information about sound, acceleration and gravity through a small number of mechanotransduction channels in the hair cell stereocilia and voltage activated Ca(2+) channels at the ribbon synapse, where it drives neurotransmission. The mechanotransduction process relies on the endocochlear potential, an electrical potential difference between endolymph and perilymph, the two fluids bathing respectively the apical and basolateral membrane of the cells in the organ of Corti. In mouse models, deafness and lack or reduction of the endocochlear potential correlate with ablation of connexin (Cx) 26 or 30. These Cxs form heteromeric channels assembled in a network of gap junction plaques connecting the supporting and epithelial cells of the organ of Corti presumably for K(+) recycle and transfer of key metabolites, for example, the Ca(2+) -mobilizing second messenger IP(3) . Ca(2+) signaling in these cells could play a crucial role in regulating Cx expression and function. Another district where Ca(2+) signaling alterations link to hearing loss is hair cell apex, where ablation or missense mutations of the PMCA2 Ca(2+) -pump of the stereocilia cause deafness and loss of balance. If less Ca(2+) is exported from the stereocilia, as in the PMCA2 mouse mutants, Ca(2+) concentration in endolymph is expected to fall causing an alteration of the mechanotransduction process. This may provide a clue as to why, in some cases, PMCA2 mutations potentiated the deafness phenotype induced by coexisting mutations of cadherin-23 (Usher syndrome type 1D), a single pass membrane Ca(2+) binding protein that is abundantly expressed in the stereocilia.  相似文献   

15.
Transient receptor potential (TRP) ion channel superfamily is involved in sensing and transmission of a broad variety of external or internal stimuli, including but not limited to mechanical stress. Based on homology analysis, genetic and molecular studies have recently identified TRP channels in different tissues, comprising blood vessels. In invertebrates, many TRP channels including five TRPV channels identified in Caenorhabditis elegans and two in Drosophila have been implicated in mechanosensory behaviors as molecular basis of volume regulation, hearing and touch sensitivity. Consistently, in mammals many TRP family members such as TRPC1, TRPC3, TRPC6, TRPM4, TRPM7, TRPN1, TRPA1, TRPY1, TRPP1, TRPP2, and notably, TRPV1, TPRV2 as well as TRPV4 have been reported to be involved in mechanotransduction. This review summarizes recent and at times controversial findings on the role and regulation of TRP channels in mechanotransduction. Specifically, we highlight the relevance of TRPV channels in vascular regulation and focus on TRPV4 in the vascular system of the lung, which is constantly exposed to a unique combination of circumferential and longitudinal strains. In light of our observation in intact pulmonary microvessels that mechanical stress induced Ca2+ signaling in endothelial cells is closely related to TRPV4 activity, we postulate that TRPV4 plays a critical role in lung vascular mechanotransduction. The progress in this rapidly expanding field may allow for the identification of new molecular targets and the development of new therapeutic approaches in a number of intractable diseases related to mechanical stress.  相似文献   

16.
Vibration of the stereociliary bundles activates calcium-permeable mechanotransducer (MT) channels to initiate sound detection in cochlear hair cells. Different regions of the cochlea respond preferentially to different acoustic frequencies, with variation in the unitary conductance of the MT channels contributing to this tonotopic organization. Although the molecular identity of the MT channel remains uncertain, two members of the transmembrane channel–like family, Tmc1 and Tmc2, are crucial to hair cell mechanotransduction. We measured MT channel current amplitude and Ca2+ permeability along the cochlea’s longitudinal (tonotopic) axis during postnatal development of wild-type mice and mice lacking Tmc1 (Tmc1−/−) or Tmc2 (Tmc2−/−). In wild-type mice older than postnatal day (P) 4, MT current amplitude increased ∼1.5-fold from cochlear apex to base in outer hair cells (OHCs) but showed little change in inner hair cells (IHCs), a pattern apparent in mutant mice during the first postnatal week. After P7, the OHC MT current in Tmc1−/− (dn) mice declined to zero, consistent with their deafness phenotype. In wild-type mice before P6, the relative Ca2+ permeability, PCa, of the OHC MT channel decreased from cochlear apex to base. This gradient in PCa was not apparent in IHCs and disappeared after P7 in OHCs. In Tmc1−/− mice, PCa in basal OHCs was larger than that in wild-type mice (to equal that of apical OHCs), whereas in Tmc2−/−, PCa in apical and basal OHCs and IHCs was decreased compared with that in wild-type mice. We postulate that differences in Ca2+ permeability reflect different subunit compositions of the MT channel determined by expression of Tmc1 and Tmc2, with the latter conferring higher PCa in IHCs and immature apical OHCs. Changes in PCa with maturation are consistent with a developmental decrease in abundance of Tmc2 in OHCs but not in IHCs.  相似文献   

17.
Sound stimuli are converted into electrical signals via gating of mechano-electrical transducer (MT) channels in the hair cell stereociliary bundle. The molecular composition of the MT channel is still not fully established, although transmembrane channel–like protein isoform 1 (TMC1) may be one component. We found that in outer hair cells of Beethoven mice containing a M412K point mutation in TMC1, MT channels had a similar unitary conductance to that of wild-type channels but a reduced selectivity for Ca2+. The Ca2+-dependent adaptation that adjusts the operating range of the channel was also impaired in Beethoven mutants, with reduced shifts in the relationship between MT current and hair bundle displacement for adapting steps or after lowering extracellular Ca2+; these effects may be attributed to the channel’s reduced Ca2+ permeability. Moreover, the density of stereociliary CaATPase pumps for Ca2+ extrusion was decreased in the mutant. The results suggest that a major component of channel adaptation is regulated by changes in intracellular Ca2+. Consistent with this idea, the adaptive shift in the current–displacement relationship when hair bundles were bathed in endolymph-like Ca2+ saline was usually abolished by raising the intracellular Ca2+ concentration.  相似文献   

18.
In many cases, the mechanical properties of a tumor are different from those of the host tissue. Mechanical cues regulate cancer development by affecting both tumor cells and their microenvironment, by altering cell migration, proliferation, extracellular matrix remodeling and metastatic spread. Cancer cells sense mechanical stimuli such as tissue stiffness, shear stress, tissue pressure of the extracellular space (outside-in mechanosensation). These mechanical cues are transduced into a cellular response (e. g. cell migration and proliferation; inside-in mechanotransduction) or to a response affecting the microenvironment (e. g. inducing a fibrosis or building up growth-induced pressure; inside-out mechanotransduction). These processes heavily rely on mechanosensitive membrane proteins, prominently ion channels. Mechanosensitive ion channels are involved in the Ca2+-signaling of the tumor and stroma cells, both directly, by mediating Ca2+ influx (e. g. Piezo and TRP channels), or indirectly, by maintaining the electrochemical gradient necessary for Ca2+ influx (e. g. K2P, KCa channels). This review aims to discuss the diverse roles of mechanosenstive ion channels in cancer progression, especially those involved in Ca2+-signaling, by pinpointing their functional relevance in tumor pathophysiology.  相似文献   

19.
The process of Ca2+ release from sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) comprises 4 phases in smooth muscle cells. Phase 1 is characterized by a large increase of the intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) with a minimal reduction of the free luminal SR [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]FSR). Importantly, active SR Ca2+ ATPases (SERCA pumps) are necessary for phase 1 to occur. This situation cannot be explained by the standard kinetics that involves a fixed amount of luminal Ca2+ binding sites. A new mathematical model was developed that assumes an increasing SR Ca2+ buffering capacity in response to an increase of the luminal SR [Ca2+] that is called Kinetics-on-Demand (KonD) model. This approach can explain both phase 1 and the refractory period associated with a recovered [Ca2+]FSR. Additionally, our data suggest that active SERCA pumps are a requisite for KonD to be functional; otherwise luminal SR Ca2+ binding proteins switch to standard kinetics. The importance of KonD Ca2+ binding properties is twofold: a more efficient Ca2+ release process and that [Ca2+]FSR and Ca2+-bound to SR proteins ([Ca2+]BSR) can be regulated separately allowing for Ca2+ release to occur (provided by Ca2+-bound to luminal Ca2+ binding proteins) without an initial reduction of the [Ca2+]FSR.  相似文献   

20.
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