Published January 3, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Nonquantal transmission at the vestibular hair cell–calyx synapse: KLV currents modulate fast electrical and slow K+ potentials

  • 1. Rice University
  • 2. Yale University
  • 3. University of Illinois at Chicago
  • 4. University of Chicago

Description

Vestibular hair cells transmit information about head position and motion across synapses to primary afferent neurons. At some of these synapses, the afferent neuron envelopes the hair cell, forming an enlarged synaptic terminal called a calyx. The vestibular hair cell–calyx synapse supports a mysterious form of electrical transmission that does not involve gap junctions, termed nonquantal transmission (NQT). The NQT mechanism is thought to involve the flow of ions from the presynaptic hair cell to the postsynaptic calyx through low-voltage-activated channels driven by changes in cleft [K+] as K+ exits the hair cell. However, this hypothesis has not been tested with a quantitative model and the possible role of an electrical potential in the cleft has remained speculative. Here, we present a computational model that captures experimental observations of NQT and identifies features that support the existence of an electrical potential (ϕ) in the synaptic cleft. We show that changes in cleft ϕ reduce transmission latency and illustrate the relative contributions of both cleft [K+] and ϕ to the gain and phase of NQT. We further demonstrate that the magnitude and speed of NQT depend on calyx morphology and that increasing calyx height reduces action potential latency in the calyx afferent. These predictions are consistent with the idea that the calyx evolved to enhance NQT and speed up vestibular signals that drive neural circuits controlling gaze, balance, and orientation.

Data availability

The model was implemented in Comsol Multiphysics 5.6 software. Equations and data sources are available in SI Appendix, Computational Methods and Experimental Methods. The Comsol file (.mph) containing the model, and other supporting files, are publicly publicly available on GitHub: (https://github.com/acgsci/vestibularHairCellCalyxNQT).

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govindaraju-et-al-2023-nonquantal-transmission-at-the-vestibular-hair-cell-calyx-synapse-klv-currents-modulate-fast.pdf

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.2207466120
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10341

Funding

National Institutes of Health
R01 DC012347
National Institutes of Health
DC002290
Hearing Health Foundation
Emerging Research Grant
Rice University
ENRICH program

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Neurobiology