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Na<sup>+</sup> Currents in Vestibular Type I and Type II Hair Cells of the Embryo and Adult Chicken
29
Citations
41
References
2003
Year
Vestibular TypeIi Hair CellsSensory SystemsCellular PhysiologyEmbryologyAdult ChickenCell PhysiologyHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyMolecular PhysiologyVestibular SystemCell MembraneIon ChannelsMorphogenesisEmbryonic DevelopmentBiologyDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyElectrophysiologyMedicineCell Membrane DepolarizationComparative Physiology
In birds, type I and type II hair cells differentiate before birth. Here we describe that chick hair cells, from the semicircular canals, begin expressing a voltage-dependent Na current (INa) from embryonic day 14 (E14) and continue to express the current up to hatching (E21). During this period, INa was present in most (31/43) type I hair cells irrespective of their position in the crista, in most type II hair cells located far from the planum semilunatum (48/63), but only occasionally in type II hair cells close to the planum semilunatum (2/35). INa activated close to -60 mV, showed fast time- and voltage-dependent activation and inactivation, and was completely, and reversibly, blocked by submicromolar concentrations of tetrodotoxin (Kd = 17 nM). One peculiar property of INa concerns its steady-state inactivation, which is complete at -60 mV (half-inactivating voltage = -96 mV). INa was found in type I and type II hair cells from the adult chicken as well, where it had similar, although possibly not identical, properties and regional distribution. Current-clamp experiments showed that INa could contribute to the voltage response provided that the cell membrane was depolarized from holding potentials more negative than -80 mV. When recruited, INa produced a significant acceleration of the cell membrane depolarization, which occasionally elicited a large rapid depolarization followed by a rapid repolarization (action-potential-like response). Possible physiological roles for INa in the embryo and adult chicken are discussed.
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