The effects of the activation of the inner-hair-cell basolateral K+ channels on auditory nerve responses

Alessandro Altoè*, Ville Pulkki, Sarah Verhulst

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

15 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The basolateral membrane of the mammalian inner hair cell (IHC) expresses large voltage and Ca2+ gated outward K+ currents. To quantify how the voltage-dependent activation of the K+ channels affects the functionality of the auditory nerve innervating the IHC, this study adopts a model of mechanical-to-neural transduction in which the basolateral K+ conductances of the IHC can be made voltage-dependent or not. The model shows that the voltage-dependent activation of the K+ channels (i) enhances the phase-locking properties of the auditory fiber (AF) responses; (ii) enables the auditory nerve to encode a large dynamic range of sound levels; (iii) enables the AF responses to synchronize precisely with the envelope of amplitude modulated stimuli; and (iv), is responsible for the steep offset responses of the AFs. These results suggest that the basolateral K+ channels play a major role in determining the well-known response properties of the AFs and challenge the classical view that describes the IHC membrane as an electrical low-pass filter. In contrast to previous models of the IHC-AF complex, this study ascribes many of the AF response properties to fairly basic mechanisms in the IHC membrane rather than to complex mechanisms in the synapse.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)68-80
JournalHearing Research
Volume364
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Keywords

  • Adaptation
  • Auditory nerve
  • Inner hair cell
  • K channels
  • Phase-locking
  • Recovery

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