Author:
Guan Chonglin,Nishi Kengo,Kreis Christian T.,Bäumchen Oliver,Göpfert Martin C.,Schmidt Christoph F.
Abstract
AbstractAuditory receptors can be motile to actively amplify their mechanical input. Here we describe a novel and different type of motility that, residing in supporting cells, shapes physiological responses of mechanoreceptor cells. InDrosophilalarvae, supporting cap cells transmit mechanical stimuli to proprioceptive chordotonal neurons. We found that the cap cells are strongly pre-stretched at rest to twice their relaxed length. The tension in these cells is modulated by non-muscle myosin-II motors. Activating the motors optogenetically causes contractions of the cap cells. Cap-cell-specific knockdown of the regulatory light chain of myosin-II alters mechanically evoked receptor neuron responses, converting them from phasic to more tonic, impairing sensory adaptation. Hence, two motile mechanisms seem to operate in concert in insect chordotonal organs, one in the sensory receptor neurons, based on dynein, and the other in supporting cells, based on myosin.One Sentence SummaryMyosin II motors in contractile cells pre-stretchDrosophilastretch receptors.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory