James Hudspeth
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A. James Hudspeth is the F.M. Kirby Professor at
Rockefeller University The Rockefeller University is a private biomedical research and graduate-only university in New York City, New York. It focuses primarily on the biological and medical sciences and provides doctoral and postdoctoral education. It is classif ...
in New York City, where he is director of the F.M. Kirby Center for Sensory Neuroscience. His laboratory studies the physiological basis of hearing.


Early life and education

As a teenager, James Hudspeth spent his summers working as a technician in the lab of neurophysiologist Peter Kellaway at Baylor College of Medicine. Hudspeth was expelled from high school for mixing dangerous chemicals and other mischief. Hudspeth graduated from Harvard College in 1967, and received his master's degree from Harvard University in 1968. He enrolled in a graduate program in neurobiology to avoid being drafted into the military, but a year later the policy was changed, requiring him to enter medical school for exemption. He studied under Nobel prize winners Torsten Wiesel and David Hubel. He completed both programs and received his PhD in 1973 and MD in 1974, both from Harvard University. He began a postdoctoral fellowship with Åke Flock at the Karolinska Institute, but returned soon afterwards to Harvard Medical School.


Career

Following his postdoctoral training, Hudspeth was a professor at Caltech from 1975 to 1983. He then moved to the UCSF School of Medicine where he was a professor from 1983 to 1989. He directed the neuroscience program at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center from 1989 until 1995, when the department was closed. In 1995, he was recruited to the
Rockefeller University The Rockefeller University is a private biomedical research and graduate-only university in New York City, New York. It focuses primarily on the biological and medical sciences and provides doctoral and postdoctoral education. It is classif ...
. Hudspeth has been an
HHMI The Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) is an American non-profit medical research organization based in Chevy Chase, Maryland. It was founded in 1953 by Howard Hughes, an American business magnate, investor, record-setting pilot, engineer, fil ...
investigator since 1993.


Research

Hudspeth's research is focused on
sensorineural hearing loss Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is a type of hearing loss in which the root cause lies in the inner ear or sensory organ (cochlea and associated structures) or the vestibulocochlear nerve (cranial nerve VIII). SNHL accounts for about 90% of rep ...
, and the deterioration of the hair cells, the sensory cells of the cochlea. Hudspeth's bold interpretation of the data obtained in his careful experimental research combined with biophysical modelling lead him to propose for the first time that the sense of hearing depends on a channel that is opened by mechanical force: The hair cells located in the
inner ear The inner ear (internal ear, auris interna) is the innermost part of the vertebrate ear. In vertebrates, the inner ear is mainly responsible for sound detection and balance. In mammals, it consists of the bony labyrinth, a hollow cavity in the ...
perceive sound when their apical end -consisting of a bundle of filaments- bends in response to the movement caused by this sound. The activated hair cell rapidly fills with calcium entering from the outside of the cell, which in turn activates the release of neurotransmitters that start a signal to the brain. Hudspeth proposed the existence of a "gating spring" opened by direct mechanical force that would open an hypothetical channel responsible for the entry of calcium ions. The hypothesis was based on the following evidence: 1) Part of the energy needed to bend the filament bundle was mysteriously lost, but could be explained if it was used to opening this gating spring, 2) The entry of calcium ions was microseconds long, this is so fast that only direct opening -without a cascade of chemical reactions- could account for it and 3) Hudspeth tested a model analogue to the opening of a door with a string attached to the door knob and demonstrated that a similar process was taking place when the filaments of the hair cell moved. Furthermore, microscopic evidence showed the existence of such a string-like structure tethering the tip of one filament to the side of and adjacent filament that could be the elusive gating spring; this string—called the tip link—would tense if the filament bundle was bend and then open the channel. Although the precise identity of the proteins forming the tip link and the mechanosensitive channel is still controversial 30 years later. Hudspeth's hypothesis was correct and fundamental for the understanding of the sense of hearing.


Noted publications

*Holton T & A.J. Hudspeth ''A'' ''Micromechanical contribution to cochlear tuning and tonotopic organization.'' Science (1983); 222 (4623): 508–510 *D.P. Corey, A.J. Hudspeth ''Kinetics of the receptor current in bullfrog saccular hair cells.'' J. Neurosci., 3 (1983): 962-976 *Rosenblatt KP, Sun ZP, Heller S, A.J. Hudspeth  D''istribution of Ca2+-activated K+ channel isoforms along the tonotopic gradient of the chicken's cochlea.'' Neuron (1997): 19(5): 1061–1075 (note: this research was continued several years later taking advantage of newly available technology) *A.J. Hudspeth ''How hearing happens.'' NEURON (1997): 19(5): 947-950 * Lopez-Schier H, Starr CJ, Kappler JA, Kollmar R, A.J. Hudspeth  ''Directional cell migration establishes the axes of planar polarity in the posterior lateral-line organ of the zebrafish.''  Dev CELL (2004): 7(3):401–412 *Chan DK, A.J. Hudspeth   ''Ca2+ current-driven nonlinear amplification by the mammalian cochlea in vitro''.  Nature Neuro (2005): 8(2):149–155 *Kozlov AS, Risler T, A.J. Hudspeth  ''Coherent motion of stereocilia assures the concerted gating of hair-cell transduction channels.'' Nature Neuro (2007): 10(1):87–92 *Kozlov AS, Baumgart J, Risler T, Versteegh CP, A.J. Hudspeth ''Forces between clustered stereocilia minimize friction in the ear on a subnanometre scale.'' Nature. (2011): 474 (7351):376–9 *Fisher JA, Nin F, Reichenbach T, Uthaiah RC, A.J. Hudspeth T''he spatial pattern of cochlear amplification Neuron (2012): 76(5):989–9''


Awards

* 1985
W. Alden Spencer Award The W. Alden Spencer Award is awarded to an investigator in recognition of outstanding research contributions by the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, College of Physicians and Surgeons, the Department of Neuroscience, and T ...
* 1991 K.S. Cole Award, Biophysical Society * 1994 Charles A. Dana Award * 1996 Rosenstiel Award * 2002 Award of Merit, Association for Research in OtolaryngologyForces between clustered stereocilia minimize friction in the ear on a subnanometre scale. Kozlov AS, Baumgart J, Risler T, Versteegh CP, A.J. Hudspeth. Nature. 2011 May 22;474(7351):376-9. doi: 10.1038/nature10073. * 2003 Ralph W. Gerard Prize, Society for Neuroscience * 2010 Guyot Prize, University of Groningen * Elected member of the
National Academy of Sciences The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) is a United States nonprofit, non-governmental organization. NAS is part of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, along with the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) and the Nati ...
and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences *2015 Elected member of the American Philosophical Society * 2018
Kavli Prize The Kavli Prize was established in 2005 as a joint venture of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, the Norwegian Ministry of Education and Research, and the Kavli Foundation. It honors, supports, and recognizes scientists for outstand ...
in Neuroscience (shared with
Christine Petit Christine Petit (born 4 February 1948) is a French geneticist. She holds professorships at the Collège de France and the Pasteur Institute. Biography Petit was born in Laignes in 1948. She initially studied at the Paris teaching hospital, Piti ...
and
Robert Fettiplace Robert Fettiplace FRS is a British neuroscientist, and Steenbock Professor of Neural and Behavioral Sciences, at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Work Fettiplace studied the mechanism of hearing in vertebrates. In 1976, he and Andre ...
) * 2020 Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize (shared with
Christine Petit Christine Petit (born 4 February 1948) is a French geneticist. She holds professorships at the Collège de France and the Pasteur Institute. Biography Petit was born in Laignes in 1948. She initially studied at the Paris teaching hospital, Piti ...
and
Robert Fettiplace Robert Fettiplace FRS is a British neuroscientist, and Steenbock Professor of Neural and Behavioral Sciences, at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Work Fettiplace studied the mechanism of hearing in vertebrates. In 1976, he and Andre ...
).Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize 2020
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References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hudspeth, A. James Living people Year of birth missing (living people) Harvard Medical School alumni Rockefeller University faculty Members of the United States National Academy of Sciences California Institute of Technology faculty Kavli Prize laureates in Neuroscience