State dependent effects on the frequency response of prestin real and imaginary components of nonlinear capacitance
Joseph Santos-Sacchi, Dhasakumar Navaratnam, Winston Tan

TL;DR
This study investigates how the frequency response of nonlinear capacitance in outer hair cells depends on the state of prestin, revealing frequency-dependent trade-offs in charge movement components and the influence of membrane tension and voltage history.
Contribution
It demonstrates the frequency-dependent behavior of real and imaginary components of NLC and introduces the Fis metric to analyze prestin's conformational states and their effects.
Findings
Real and imaginary NLC components trade off with frequency.
Initial Vh influences the intersection frequency Fis.
Membrane tension effects vary with initial Vh.
Abstract
The outer hair cell (OHC) membrane harbors a voltage-dependent protein, prestin (SLC26a5), in high density, whose charge movement is evidenced as a nonlinear capacitance (NLC). NLC is bell-shaped, with its peak occurring at a voltage, Vh, where sensor charge is equally distributed across the plasma membrane. Thus, Vh provides information on the conformational state of prestin. Vh is sensitive to membrane tension, shifting to positive voltage as tension increases and is the basis for considering prestin piezoelectric (PZE). NLC can be deconstructed into real and imaginary components that report on charge movements in phase or 90 degrees out of phase with AC voltage. Here we show in membrane macro-patches of the OHC that there is a partial trade-off in the magnitude of real and imaginary components as interrogation frequency increases, as predicted by a recent PZE model (Rabbitt, 2020).…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, Genetics · Acoustic Wave Phenomena Research · Acoustic Wave Resonator Technologies
