Title: Hair Cells
1Hair Cells
- Vestibular Classics
- February 2, 2007
- Isabel Acevedo
2Why hair cells?
- Sensory receptors of the vestibular and auditory
systems in all vertebrates. - Transduces mechanical stimuli into biological
signals that are presented to the brain by
afferents.
3Hair Cell Morphology
Cuticular Plate
4Hair Cell Morphology
- Types of Links
- Kinocilial Links (KL)
- Ankle Links (AL)
- Shaft Links (SL)
- Upper Lateral Links (UL)
- Tip Links (TL)
TL
AL SL
Adapted from Pickles Corey 1992
5Stereocilia Growth
1st Step Stereocilia appear to elongate
2nd Step Stereocilia increase in width
3st Step Stereocilia increase in length
Tilney et al, 1986.
6Hair Cell Types
Dickman in Fundamental Neuroscience, 2nd ed.
(2002)
7Hair Cell Communication
- Afferent Innervation heterogenous population of
fibers, whose somata are located in Scarpas
ganglion, that convey hair cell response to the
brainstem cerebrum. Excitatory amino acids
such as aspartate glutamate are the
neurotransmitters at the synapse between the
receptor cell afferent fibers - Efferent Innervation fibers originating in the
medulla, at the level of the vestibular nuclei,
that control the activity of hair cells. These
fibers contain acetylcholine and calcitonine gene
as neurotransmitters and are activated by
behaviorally arousing stimuli or by trigeminal
stimulation.
8Accessory Structures
Otolith Organs Linear Accelerations
Semicircular Canals Angular Acceleration
Dickman in Fundamental Neuroscience, 2nd ed.
(2002)
9Transduction
- Conversion of mechanical energy into electrical
charges. - External mechanical stimulus causes hair cells to
move - Appropriate mechanical stimulus modulates an
ionic current flow from endolymph into apical end.
10Transduction In Vitro
Hudspeth Corey 1977
Dickman in Fundamental Neuroscience, 2nd ed.
(2002)
11Transduction In Vitro
Hudspeth and Corey, 1977
12Transduction In Vivo
Ionic Composition of Fluids
Dickman in Fundamental Neuroscience, 2nd ed.
(2002)
13Transduction Negative Feedback
Release neurotransmitters (Asp Glu)
?Ki
?Ca2i
?Ki
Mechanical stimulus towards kinocilium
Depolarization
Activate voltage-gated Ca2 channels
Ca2 activated K (BK) channels
Fettiplace Fuch, 1999.
High Intensity
Low Intensity
14Transduction Calcium Channels
- Two types of Ca2 buffers.
- Immobile buffers (pumps exchangers) slow
release of Ca2 into the presynaptic cytoplasm. - Mobile buffer (Ca2 binding proteins like
calbindin-D28k) cause presynaptic Ca2i to
fall very quickly by sequestering nearly all free
Ca2 within 100 µs after Ca2 channels close.
15Gating Springs
Pickles Corey, 1992.
16Gating Springs
Lenzi Roberts, 1994.
Pickles Corey, 1992.
17Adaptation
- Hair bundle is unlikely to develop so accurately
that the sensitive transduction apparatus is
perfectly poised at is position of greatest
mechanosensitivity. - Necessary mechanism to compensate for
developmental irregularities and environmental
changes adjust the tension at the gating
springs. - If tip links are the gating springs, the most
likely possibility is that the anchoring points
are repositioned. - Depends on Ca2i.
Pickles Corey, 1992.
18Site of Transduction
- Hudspeth Extracellular potential change was
greatest around the top of the bundle. - Ca2-sensitive fluorescent dye Large
fluorescence signals observed in the apical
cytoplasm, immediately beneath the hair bundle.
19Morphologic Polarization
Zakir, et al., 2002
Dickman in Fundamental Neuroscience, 2nd ed.
(2002)
Si, et al., 2002
20Regeneration
21Summary
- Hair Cells are the receptors of mechanical
stimuli. - Hair cells transduce mechanical stimuli to be
presented to and analyzed by the brain. - Hair Cells are heterogeneous agencies of
transduction by virtue of their morphological
and physiological differences varying
complements of the transmitters and modulators
and their receptors and by the possibility that
they behave differently in regard to resting and
stimulated modes and adapt differently.