Simulation of the Response of the Inner Hair Cell Stereocilia Bundle to an Acoustical Stimulus
نویسندگان
چکیده
Mammalian hearing relies on a cochlear hydrodynamic sensor embodied in the inner hair cell stereocilia bundle. It is presumed that acoustical stimuli induce a fluid shear-driven motion between the tectorial membrane and the reticular lamina to deflect the bundle. It is hypothesized that ion channels are opened by molecular gates that sense tension in tip-links, which connect adjacent stepped rows of stereocilia. Yet almost nothing is known about how the fluid and bundle interact. Here we show using our microfluidics model how each row of stereocilia and their associated tip links and gates move in response to an acoustical input that induces an orbital motion of the reticular lamina. The model confirms the crucial role of the positioning of the tectorial membrane in hearing, and explains how this membrane amplifies and synchronizes the timing of peak tension in the tip links. Both stereocilia rotation and length change are needed for synchronization of peak tip link tension. Stereocilia length change occurs in response to accelerations perpendicular to the oscillatory fluid shear flow. Simulations indicate that nanovortices form between rows to facilitate diffusion of ions into channels, showing how nature has devised a way to solve the diffusive mixing problem that persists in engineered microfluidic devices.
منابع مشابه
Imaging hair cell transduction at the speed of sound: dynamic behavior of mammalian stereocilia.
The cochlea contains two types of sensory cells, the inner and outer hair cells. Sound-evoked deflection of outer hair cell stereocilia leads to fast force production that will enhance auditory sensitivity up to 1,000-fold. In contrast, inner hair cells are thought to have a purely receptive function. Deflection of their stereocilia produces receptor potentials, transmitter release, and action ...
متن کاملPsychological and Physiological Acoustics Session 4aPPa: Biomechanics of Hearing 4aPPa6. Weak lateral coupling between stereocilia of mammalian cochlear hair cells requires new stimulus methods to study the biomechanics of hearing
The forces felt by different transduction channels in a bundle depend critically on how well stereocilia remain cohesive during deflection. In the bullfrog saccule, sliding adhesion mediated by horizontal top connectors (HTC) confers coherent motion to hair cell stereocilia and parallel gating to all transduction channels. In cochlear inner and outer hair cells (IHCs and OHCs), the mature compl...
متن کاملAssembly of hair bundles, an amazing problem for cell biology
The hair bundle--the sensory organelle of inner-ear hair cells of vertebrates--exemplifies the ability of a cell to assemble complex, elegant structures. Proper construction of the bundle is required for proper mechanotransduction in response to external forces and to transmit information about sound and movement. Bundles contain tightly controlled numbers of actin-filled stereocilia, which are...
متن کاملMutant analysis reveals whirlin as a dynamic organizer in the growing hair cell stereocilium.
Little is known of the molecular processes that lead to the growth of stereocilia on the surface of hair cells in the inner ear. The PDZ protein whirlin is known, by virtue of the whirler mutation, to be involved in the process of stereocilia elongation and actin polymerization in the sensory hair cells of mammals. We have investigated the function of whirlin and its putative interacting partne...
متن کاملDisruption of SorCS2 reveals differences in the regulation of stereociliary bundle formation between hair cell types in the inner ear
Behavioural anomalies suggesting an inner ear disorder were observed in a colony of transgenic mice. Affected animals were profoundly deaf. Severe hair bundle defects were identified in all outer and inner hair cells (OHC, IHC) in the cochlea and in hair cells of vestibular macular organs, but hair cells in cristae were essentially unaffected. Evidence suggested the disorder was likely due to g...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره 6 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2011