Figure 4
Motor Behavior Selectively Modulates Hair Cells Activated by Deflection in the Posterior Direction
(A–C) Three examples of synapses whose response was (A) unaffected, (B) suppressed during the entire stimulation episode, and (C) suppressed only during the initial part of the stimulus (shaded areas represent the SEM).
(D) The suppression index (SI), calculated on a point-by-point basis during mechanical stimulation (
(E) Plot of the relation between the SI at each time point during a mechanical stimulus and the number of spikes in the motor nerve in the preceding 50-ms time interval. Only synapses classified as suppressed were analyzed. Collected results from 29 synapses in 6 fish are shown. The data could be described by a Hill equation of the form SI(Ns) = (SImax∗Ns)/(Ns + N1/2), where Ns is the number of spikes, SImax is the maximum SI (1.05 ± 0.08), and N1/2 is the number of spikes coinciding with half-maximal suppression (1.12 ± 0.42). Error bars show SEM.
(F) The effects of motor activity on synaptic transmission from hair cells of opposing polarity. Column 1: the number of synapses activated by deflection in the posterior and anterior directions is shown. Measurements were made in a total of 41 synapses in 8 neuromasts in 6 fish. Column 2: the number of synapses suppressed during motor activity, classified as described in the
(G) Comparison of the average magnitude of the suppression index during a swimming bout in hair cells polarized for anterior and posterior deflection. We also compared the maximal SI values during a swimming bout: these were also significantly different in hair cells of opposite polarity (p < 0.001; Mann-Whitney U test). Bars show SEM.