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Biophys J, January 2002, p. 64-75, Vol. 82, No. 1
Subunits
The Center for Hearing and Balance, Department of Biomedical Engineering and Department of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205-2195 USA
The receptor potential of sensory hair cells arises from
the gating of mechanosensitive cation channels, but its amplitude and
time course also depend on the number and kinetics of voltage-gated ion
channels in each cell. Prominent among these are "BK" potassium channels encoded by the slo gene that support electrical
tuning in some hair cells. Hair cells tuned to low frequencies have
slowly gating BK channels, whereas those of higher-frequency hair cells gate more rapidly. Alternative splicing of the slo gene
mRNA that encodes the pore-forming
subunit can alter BK channel
kinetics, and gating is dramatically slowed by coexpression with
modulatory
subunits. The effect of the
subunit is consistent
with low-frequency tuning, and
mRNA is expressed at highest levels
in the low frequency apex of the bird's auditory epithelium. How might
an expression gradient of
subunits contribute to hair cell tuning?
The present work uses a computational model of hair cell-tuning based
on the functional properties of BK channels expressed from hair cell
and
slo cDNA. The model reveals that a limited
tonotopic gradient could be achieved simply by altering the fraction of
BK channels in each hair cell that are combined with
subunits.
However, complete coverage of the tuning spectrum requires kinetic
variants in addition to those modeled here.
Biophys J, January 2002, p. 64-75, Vol. 82, No. 1
© 2002 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/02/01/64/12 $2.00
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