In situ motions of individual inner-hair-cell stereocilia from stapes stimulation in adult mice.

2021 
In vertebrate hearing organs, mechanical vibrations are converted to ionic currents through mechanoelectrical-transduction (MET) channels. Concerted stereocilia motion produces an ensemble MET current driving the hair-cell receptor potential. Mammalian cochleae are unique in that the tuning of sensory cells is determined by their mechanical environment and the mode of hair-bundle stimulation that their environment creates. However, little is known about the in situ intra-hair-bundle motions of stereocilia relative to one another, or to their environment. In this study, high-speed imaging allowed the stereocilium and cell-body motions of inner hair cells to be monitored in an ex vivo organ of Corti (OoC) mouse preparation. We have found that the OoC rotates about the base of the inner pillar cell, the hair bundle rotates about its base and lags behind the motion of the apical surface of the cell, and the individual stereocilia move semi-independently within a given hair bundle. Wang et al. use high-speed imaging to examine the in situ movement of inner hair-cell stereocilia in the mouse ear. They report that these individual cilia move semi-independently within their given bundle, which forms part of a larger complex within the inner ear, providing unique filtering opportunity for hearing in mammals.
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