| On the Effect of Prestin on the Electrical Breakdown of Cell Membranes Biophysical Journal, Volume 90, Issue 3, 1 February 2006, Pages 967-974 Enrique G. Navarrete and Joseph Santos-Sacchi Abstract The voltage-dependent activity of prestin, the outer hair cell (OHC) motor protein essential for its electromotility, enhances the mammalian inner ear’s auditory sensitivity. We investigated the effect of prestin’s activity on the plasma membrane’s (PM) susceptibility to electroporation (EP) via cell-attached patch-clamping. Guinea pig OHCs, TSA201 cells, and prestin-transfected TSA cells were subjected to incremental 50s and/or 50ms voltage pulse trains, or ramps, at rates from 10V/s to 1kV/s, to a maximum transmembrane potential of ±1000mV. EP was determined by an increase in capacitance to whole-cell levels. OHCs were probed at the prestin-rich lateral PM or prestin-devoid basal portion; TSA cells were patched at random points. OHCs were consistently electroporated with 50ms pulses, with significant resistance to depolarizing pulses. Although EP rarely occurred with 50s pulses, prior stimulation with this protocol had a significant effect on the sensitivity to EP with 50ms pulses, regardless of polarity or PM domain. Consistent with these results, resistance to EP with depolarizing 10-V/s ramps was also found. Our findings with TSA cells were comparable, showing resistance to EP with both depolarizing 50-ms pulses and 10V/s ramps. We conclude prestin significantly affects susceptibility to EP, possibly via known biophysical influences on specific membrane capacitance and/or membrane stiffness. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (133 kb) |
| Silencing the Cochlear Amplifier by Immobilizing Prestin Neuron, Volume 58, Issue 3, 8 May 2008, Pages 299-301 Ulrich Müller and Peter Gillespie Summary Achieving the exquisite sensitivity and frequency selectivity of the mammalian ear requires active amplification of input sound. In this issue of , Dallos and colleagues demonstrate that the molecular motor prestin, which drives shape changes in the soma of mechanosensory hair cells, underlies mechanical feedback mechanisms for sound amplification in mammals. Summary | Full Text | PDF (181 kb) |
| Prestin-Based Outer Hair Cell Motility Is Necessary for Mammalian Cochlear Amplification Neuron, Volume 58, Issue 3, 8 May 2008, Pages 333-339 Peter Dallos, Xudong Wu, Mary Ann Cheatham, Jiangang Gao, Jing Zheng, Charles T. Anderson, Shuping Jia, Xiang Wang, Wendy H.Y. Cheng, Soma Sengupta, David Z.Z. He and Jian Zuo Summary It is a central tenet of cochlear neurobiology that mammalian ears rely on a local, mechanical amplification process for their high sensitivity and sharp frequency selectivity. While it is generally agreed that outer hair cells provide the amplification, two mechanisms have been proposed: stereociliary motility and somatic motility. The latter is driven by the motor protein prestin. Electrophysiological phenotyping of a prestin knockout mouse intimated that somatic motility is the amplifier. However, outer hair cells of knockout mice have significantly altered mechanical properties, making this mouse model unsatisfactory. Here, we study a mouse model without alteration to outer hair cell and organ of Corti mechanics or to mechanoelectric transduction, but with diminished prestin function. These animals have knockout-like behavior, demonstrating that prestin-based electromotility is required for cochlear amplification. Summary | Full Text | PDF (788 kb) |
Copyright © 2007 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 93, Issue 1, L07-L09, 1 July 2007
doi:10.1529/biophysj.107.107573
Biophysical Letters
Rui Zhang*, Feng Qian†, Lavanya Rajagopalan‡, Fred A. Pereira‡, §, William E. Brownell‡ and Bahman Anvari¶,
, 
* Applied Physics Graduate Program, Rice University, Houston, Texas
† Department of Bioengineering, Rice University, Houston, Texas
‡ Bobby R. Alford Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas
§ Huffington Center on Aging, Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas
¶ Department of Bioengineering, University of California, Riverside, California
Address reprint requests and inquiries to Bahman Anvari, Tel.: 951-827-5726.Cochlear outer hair cells (OHCs) exhibit electrically induced movements known as electromotility, which allows for the sensitivity and frequency-resolving capability of mammalian hearing 1,2,3. The interaction between the OHC lateral wall plasma membrane and the transmembrane protein, prestin, is thought to play a central role in electromotility 4. Prestin is essential for a nonlinear capacitance (NLC), which is widely accepted as the electrical signature of electromotility 5. However, the relationship between NLC and electromotility, and the mechanistic role of prestin in either of these processes, is unknown. Since electromotility involves the coupling of electrical and mechanical properties of the membrane, the role of prestin in plasma membrane mechanics and electromechanical force (EMF) generation is vital to the understanding of this process.
Membrane tethers provide a convenient method to study membrane mechanics. Using a combined optical tweezers and whole-cell voltage-clamping system to control membrane potential 6, we have investigated the contribution of prestin to membrane mechanics and EMF generation using membrane tethers formed from three test groups consisting of: 1), untransfected, 2), wild-type (WT) prestin-transfected, and 3), single point mutant (A100W) prestin-transfected human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells (see Supplementary Material ). Our choice of mutant was based on an earlier study in which replacement of an alanine residue by tryptophan (A100W), in the region of the conserved sulfate anion transporter motif resulted in a complete loss of NLC 7. Comparisons of force measurements with membrane capacitance measurements would allow us to investigate the relationships among NLC, membrane mechanics, and EMF generation.
Procedures for mechanics and EMF measurements were essentially as previously described 6,8. (See Supplementary Material for details of methods.) First, a tether was pulled at a constant rate until the force would approach a peak force Fpk. The movement was then halted and the tether was maintained at nearly constant length for several minutes, allowing the tether force to relax to a non-zero equilibrium force Feq. Effective tether viscosity (ηeff), which represents the overall viscous dissipation during tether formation 8,9, and steady-state force extrapolated to zero pulling rate Fss(0), which is the force required to hold a tether at static equilibrium 9, were estimated from the measurements of tether force at different pulling rates. For EMF measurements, once Feq was attained, the patch-clamp was used to change the transmembrane potential by applying a 1-Hz sinusoid voltage wave. Forces were measured by optical monitoring of the trapped bead displacement 6. Procedures for membrane capacitance measurements are described in Supplementary Material .
Typical NLC curves for different test groups are shown in Fig. 1 (see Supplementary Material for method). WT prestin-transfected cells show a voltage-dependent NLC function similar to that observed on OHCs 4, whereas control untransfected HEK cells have a nearly constant capacitance. Consistent with an earlier study 7, a mutation (A100W) in the sulfate transporter motif region of prestin eliminates prestin-associated charge transfer by exhibiting a non-voltage-dependent capacitance function similar to that for untransfected HEK cells.
Transfection with WT prestin significantly changes various mechanical parameters associated with the tether force (Figure 2A). The A100W mutation does not significantly alter these mechanical parameters compared to WT prestin. These data suggest that the effects of prestin on membrane mechanical properties such as curvature, bending stiffness, and tension are dependent on the presence of prestin in the membrane, but these properties are independent of prestin’s ability to enhance charge movement.
There is no statistically significant difference in ηeff between different test groups (Figure 2B). It is widely considered that ηeff is dominated by interactions between the membrane and the cytoskeleton 9. Our results therefore suggest that membrane-cytoskeleton interactions are not affected by the presence or absence of either WT prestin or prestin A100W in the membrane.
WT prestin enhances EMF twofold compared to control HEK cells (Fig. 3). On the other hand, cells transfected with prestin mutant A100W show comparable EMF to untransfected controls. This finding directly correlates with our earlier observations of linear capacitance in cells transfected with this mutant. Our results therefore directly link the presence of a specific motif within prestin (and not merely the presence of prestin) to membrane electromotility.
Our results suggest that prestin and the membrane work in concert to produce the electrical and mechanical changes during electromotility. Prestin A100W, which is incapable of charge transfer function, is unable to amplify the normal EMF of the HEK membrane.
Salicylate, the anionic amphipathic metabolite of aspirin, has been shown to block electromotility and charge movement in prestin-transfected HEK cells 4 but does not have an effect on membrane mechanics 10,11. These results (not repeated by our study) are consistent with our model that prestin-associated EMF enhancement is closely related to charge transfer but has little relationship with membrane mechanics. Further, salicylate also blocks electromotility of normal HEK cells by changing membrane surface charge 10,12.
While the presence of prestin appears to change membrane mechanical properties such as curvature, bending stiffness, and tension, and greatly enhances charge movement in and out of the membrane, a mutation in the region of sulfate transporter motif eliminates NLC and reduces EMF without affecting membrane mechanical properties. Based on these results, we propose synergistic effects of prestin and the membrane in the generation of NLC and electromotility.
We thank Cindy Shope and Haiying Liu for their assistance with cell cultures.
This work was supported in part by grants from the National Institute of Health (No. R01-DC-2775, No. R90 DK071504), the National Science Foundation (No. BES-0522862), and the Keck Center for Interdisciplinary Bioscience Training.
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