First published online May 19, 2008
Journal of Experimental Biology 211, 1764-1774 (2008)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2008
doi: 10.1242/jeb.017350
Ion channels in mammalian vestibular afferents may set regularity of firing
Ruth Anne Eatock1,2,3,*,
Jingbing Xue1,3 and
Radha Kalluri2,3
1 Otology and Laryngology, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, 243 Charles
Street, Boston, MA 02114, USA
2 Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, 243
Charles Street, Boston, MA 02114, USA
3 Eaton-Peabody Laboratory, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, 243 Charles
Street, Boston, MA 02114, USA

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Fig. 1. Vestibular epithelia, zones and afferent classes in the rodent. Confocal
images have been combined to produce this picture of part of the vestibular
portion of the mouse inner ear. The tissue is stained with fluorescently
labeled phalloidin (yellow; labels hair bundles), as well as antisera to
calretinin (green; stains certain afferents and hair cells) and β-III
tubulin (red; stains afferents). Extracellular matrices have been removed to
expose the hair cells in three sensory epithelia: the cristae of the anterior
and horizontal semicircular canals and the macula of the utricle. The central
zones of the cristae and the striolar zone of the utricular macula are
outlined in red. At the bottom edge of the tissue is part of the vestibular
ganglion. The large ganglion somata that are brightly stained for calretinin
give rise to pure-calyx afferents to the central and striolar zones. Scale
bar, 50 µm.
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Fig. 2. Schematic showing classification of vestibular afferent neurons by terminal
morphology as pure-calyx (green, C), dimorphic (orange, D) and pure-bouton
(red, B). Grey fibres are efferents, arising from neurons in the brainstem.
Pure-calyx afferents exclusively innervate the centre and striola and often
form complex calyces around multiple type I hair cells, as illustrated.
Pure-bouton afferents exclusively innervate the peripheral zone and
extrastriola and can innervate tens of type II hair cells. Dimorphic afferents
innervate both zones, but have more compact dendritic trees in the centre and
striola than in the periphery and extrastriola (not shown). Pure-calyx
afferents express calretinin, calbindin and parvalbumin; dimorphic afferents
are thought to express calbindin and parvalbumin; and pure-bouton afferents,
which are the thinnest, express only parvalbumin. Some differences in ion
channel expression have been noted between large and small isolated ganglion
somata and are indicated here on the pure-calyx and pure-bouton somata.
Whether dimorphic somata, which are likely to be mid-sized, have intermediate
expression is not known. Met, mechanoelectrical transduction channels; see
Table 2 and text for details on
other ion channels. Asterisks indicate possible sites of spike initiation on
each afferent.
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Fig. 3. Vestibular ganglion somata produce either transient or sustained firing
patterns in response to small depolarizing currents. (A,B) Voltage responses
of two isolated somata to steps of +50 pA, recorded in whole-cell current
clamp. Small depolarizing currents (4–200 pA) evoke single spikes
(transient responses) in some neurons (A) and multiple spikes (sustained
responses) in others (B). Somata dissociated from the mouse vestibular
ganglion were recorded in the first postnatal week with a standard
high-K+ pipette solution and a bath of L-15 medium. Similar results
have been obtained with perforated patch recordings and from rat vestibular
ganglion somata (J.X., R.K. and R.A.E., unpublished observations). Arrows
point to AHPs after the first spike and the offset of the step; AHPs have
longer repolarizing phases in the neuron with the sustained response (B).
(C,D) Whole-cell current responses to voltage steps, recorded in voltage clamp
from the same neurons as in A,B. Depolarizing steps (bottom panel) evoked
large brief Na+ currents followed by large steady outward
K+ currents. The sustained neuron (D) had prominent A and h
currents, but it is not established that these differences influence the spike
pattern.
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2008