Direkt zum Inhalt
 
 
Bannergrafik (ANN)
 
  Startseite  
 

Dr. Jörg Albert

University College London
United Kingdom
email: joerg.albert[at]ucl.ac.uk
URL: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/ear/research/albert

The research of the Albert lab is dedicated to the very early stages of hearing, namely the process of mechanosensory transduction. Generally, sensory transduction describes the elementary conversion of an external stimulus into an internal electrical response. In the specific case of the mechanical senses this transduction is direct, with the stimulus (e.g. a sound-induced vibration) directly opening a transducer channel in the membrane of a mechanosensory cell. In marked contrast to the striking simplicity of this mode of activation, the search for the actual molecules that mediate mechanotransduction has proved to be surprisingly difficult. Neither in mice nor in men nor in fruit flies, has an auditory transducer channel been identified molecularly till this day. Again, our lack of molecular knowledge stands in stark contrast to a rather intimate understanding of the biophysical mechanisms underlying transducer activation. Recently, it could be shown that hearing in Drosophila relies on the very same biophysical principles as does hearing in vertebrates (like frogs and mice and men). Given its enormous genetic and experimental tractability, the fruit fly has thereby entered the race for the molecular dissection of hearing. By exploiting the fruitful interplay of experimental and theoretical approaches we are trying to eventually assign specific functions to distinct molecules within the auditory transduction chain.
Methods

    * Laser-Doppler vibrometric analysis of sound receiver mechanics
    * Measurement of two-tone distortion products (DPOAEs)
    * Recordings of Compound Action Potenial (CAP) responses from the auditory nerve
    * Computational approaches (‘gating-spring model’)
    * Evolutionary analyses of auditory transduction in different Drosophila species.
    * Comparative analysis of auditory and non-auditory mechanotransduction

Zuletzt aktualisiert: 05.10.2010 · wegener

 
 
 
Fb. 17 - Biologie

Arthropod Neuroscience Network, Karl-von-Frisch-Straße 8, D-35043 Marburg
Tel. 06421/28-23414, Fax 06421/28-28941, E-Mail: schachtj@staff.uni-marburg.de

URL dieser Seite: http://www.uni-marburg.de/fb17/fachgebiete/tierphysio/neurobiologie/ann/groups/albert

Impressum