Publication:
EF-hand protein Ca2+ buffers regulate Ca2+ influx and exocytosis in sensory hair cells

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2015

Authors

Pangršič, Tina
Wolf, Fred
Strenzke, Nicola
Moser, Tobias

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Natl Acad Sciences

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

EF-hand Ca2+-binding proteins are thought to shape the spatio-temporal properties of cellular Ca2+ signaling and are prominently expressed in sensory hair cells in the ear. Here, we combined genetic disruption of parvalbumin-a, calbindin-D28k, and calretinin in mice with patch-clamp recording, in vivo physiology, and mathematical modeling to study their role in Ca2+ signaling, exocytosis, and sound encoding at the synapses of inner hair cells (IHCs). IHCs lacking all three proteins showed excessive exocytosis during prolonged depolarizations, despite enhanced Ca2+-dependent inactivation of their Ca2+ current. Exocytosis of readily releasable vesicles remained unchanged, in accordance with the estimated tight spatial coupling of Ca2+ channels and release sites (effective "coupling distance" of 17 nm). Substitution experiments with synthetic Ca2+ chelators indicated the presence of endogenous Ca2+ buffers equivalent to 1 mM synthetic Ca2+- binding sites, approximately half of them with kinetics as fast as 1,2-Bis(2-aminophenoxy) ethane N, N, N', N'-tetraacetic acid (BAPTA). Synaptic sound encoding was largely unaltered, suggesting that excess exocytosis occurs extrasynaptically. We conclude that EF-hand Ca2+ buffers regulate presynaptic IHC function for metabolically efficient sound coding.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By