Type I hair cells of striolar and central zones in vestibular organs are essential for head stability and postural control
Data files
May 29, 2026 version files 21.55 GB
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One_et_al_Fig2.zip
12.38 GB
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Ono_et_al_Fig1.zip
190.14 MB
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Ono_et_al_Fig3.zip
8.81 GB
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Ono_et_al_Fig4.zip
1.42 MB
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Ono_et_al_Fig5_6_7_S4.zip
286.24 KB
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Ono_et_al_FigS2.zip
134.58 MB
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Ono_et_al_FigS3.zip
31.73 MB
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README.md
1.19 KB
Abstract
The vestibular system of the inner ear provides head motion and orientation information required for maintaining balance and spatial orientation. Each of the five vestibular sensory organs contains type I and type II hair cells (HCs). Type I HCs are particularly notable for their evolutionary adaptability and unique calyceal synapses, in which the vestibular afferent nerve ending envelope the HC body. In vitro studies indicate that calyceal synapses can transduce signals from HCs to afferents via non-quantal transmission, a mechanism proposed to be faster than conventional bouton synaptic transmission. In specialized regions of vestibular organs - striolae and central zones - many afferents form calyces that encase multiple type I HC bodies, suggesting that non-quantal transmission could be especially important in these regions. Consistently, striolar/central zone afferents are thought to preferentially mediate rapid and high-frequency stimulations. However, the direct consequences of selectively losing these HCs remain unknown. Here, we investigated the role of type I HCs within striolar/central zones by genetically ablating these cells. Reduction of type I HCs in these regions led to a loss of calyces and a compensatory increase in striolar type II HCs. These mutants exhibit reduced vestibular-evoked potentials, a response driven predominantly by striolar activity. In contrast, the vestibulo-ocular reflex, which is thought not to require striolar/central zone function, remained intact. Furthermore, loss of striolar/central zone-specific type I HCs causes head tremor in pups and abnormal head motion in adults, indicating that these HCs are essential for mediating head stability and postural control.
Dataset DOI: 10.5061/dryad.2jm63xt35
Description of the data and file structure
README files are separately included in each folder.
Files and variables
File: Ono_et_al_Fig1.zip
Description: Confocal images that used in Figure 1.
File: One_et_al_Fig2.zip
Description: Confocal images that used in Figure 2.
File: Ono_et_al_Fig3.zip
Description: Confocal images that used in Figure 3.
File: Ono_et_al_Fig4.zip
Description: BioSigRZ files that used in Figure 4.
File: Ono_et_al_Fig5_6_7_S4.zip
Description: Values used in Figures 5, 6, 7, S4.
File: Ono_et_al_FigS2.zip
Description: Confocal images that used in Figure S2.
File: Ono_et_al_FigS3.zip
Description: Microscope images that used in Figure S3.
Code/software
FiJi (Image J): to open confocal, microscopic images
Access information
Other publicly accessible locations of the data:
- N/A
Data was derived from the following sources:
- N/A
