Evidence that protons act as neurotransmitters at vestibular hair cell-calyx afferent synapses

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Abstract

Present data support the conclusion that protons serve as an important neurotransmitter to convey excitatory stimuli from inner ear type I vestibular hair cells to postsynaptic calyx nerve terminals. Time-resolved pH imaging revealed stimulus-evoked extrusion of protons from hair cells and a subsequent buildup of [H+] within the confined chalice-shaped synaptic cleft (ΔpH ∼ -0.2). Whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings revealed a concomitant nonquantal excitatory postsynaptic current in the calyx terminal that was causally modulated by cleft acidification. The time course of [H+] buildup limits the speed of this intercellular signaling mechanism, but for tonic signals such as gravity, protonergic transmission offers a significant metabolic advantage over quantal excitatory postsynaptic currents-an advantage that may have driven the proliferation of postsynaptic calyx terminals in the inner ear vestibular organs of contemporary amniotes.

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Highstein, S. M., Holstein, G. R., Mann, M. A., & Rabbitt, R. D. (2014). Evidence that protons act as neurotransmitters at vestibular hair cell-calyx afferent synapses. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 111(14), 5421–5426. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1319561111

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