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Original Article

Frequency Dependence of Electrical Coupling in Deiters″ Cells of the Guinea Pig Cochlea

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Pages 393-399 | Received 01 Sep 2001, Accepted 15 Sep 2001, Published online: 11 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Immunolabeling with antibodies against connexins 26 and 30 showed that, in the guinea pig cochlea, supporting Deiters″ cells are massively interconnected and form an orderly network within the organ of Corti. In paired patch-clamp recordings the coupling ratio (CR) of adjacent Deiters″ cells at the apex of the cochlea (∼0.31) was 3-fold smaller than in isolated cell pairs due to shunting afforded by multicellular connectivity. With sinusoidal current stimuli the delay in signal propagation between adjacent cells increased with increasing frequency whereas the amplitude did not change significantly up to 200 Hz (corner frequency Fc ∼220 Hz). Depolarizing voltage commands applied to an outer hair cell (OHC) elicited outward potassium currents in the OHC and inward currents in the abutting Deiters″ cells, supplying direct evidence for potassium buffering in the organ of Corti. Computational analysis indicates that electrical signals injected into a Deiters″ cell are transmitted across a network segment spanning 8 cell diameters. Thus electrical coupling in the organ of Corti is unlikely to influence the selectivity of frequency filtering performed mechanically by the mammalian cochlea.

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