نتایج جستجو برای: outer hair cells

تعداد نتایج: 1459809  

2016
Anping Xia Xiaofang Liu Patrick D. Raphael Brian E. Applegate John S. Oghalai

Frequency tuning within the auditory papilla of most non-mammalian species is electrical, deriving from ion-channel resonance within their sensory hair cells. In contrast, tuning within the mammalian cochlea is mechanical, stemming from active mechanisms within outer hair cells that amplify the basilar membrane travelling wave. Interestingly, hair cells in the avian basilar papilla demonstrate ...

Journal: :Current Biology 2005
Valerie P.I. Vidal Marie-Christine Chaboissier Susanne Lützkendorf George Cotsarelis Pleasantine Mill Chi-Chung Hui Nicolas Ortonne Jean-Paul Ortonne Andreas Schedl

BACKGROUND The mammalian hair represents an unparalleled model system to understand both developmental processes and stem cell biology. The hair follicle consists of several concentric epithelial sheaths with the outer root sheath (ORS) forming the outermost layer. Functionally, the ORS has been implicated in the migration of hair stem cells from the stem cell niche toward the hair bulb. Howeve...

2012
Ruth R. Taylor Daniel J. Jagger Andrew Forge

BACKGROUND Following the loss of hair cells from the mammalian cochlea, the sensory epithelium repairs to close the lesions but no new hair cells arise and hearing impairment ensues. For any cell replacement strategy to be successful, the cellular environment of the injured tissue has to be able to nurture new hair cells. This study defines characteristics of the auditory sensory epithelium aft...

2013
J. Soons C. Steele S. Puria

Introduction Sound vibrations are collected from the external environment by the eardrum and are guided to the basilar membrane in the cochlea. Pressure differences in the two scalae of the cochlea result in a traveling wave on the basilar membrane (figure 1). The tiny displacements are detected by the deflection of thousands of hair cells, situated along this membrane. It is hypothesized that ...

2011
Kiyokazu Morioka Mary Arai Setsunosuke Ihara

The hair erection muscle, arrector pili, is a kind of smooth muscle located in the mammalian dermis. The immunohistochemical study using an antibody against smooth muscle alpha actin (SMA) showed that the arrector pili muscle develops approximately 1-2 weeks after birth in dorsal and ventral skin, but thereafter they degenerate. The arrector pili muscle was not detected in the mystacial pad dur...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2013
Mingqian Huang Albena Kantardzhieva Deborah Scheffer M Charles Liberman Zheng-Yi Chen

Isl1 is a LIM-homeodomain transcription factor that is critical in the development and differentiation of multiple tissues. In the mouse inner ear, Isl1 is expressed in the prosensory region of otocyst, in young hair cells and supporting cells, and is no longer expressed in postnatal auditory hair cells. To evaluate how continuous Isl1 expression in postnatal hair cells affects hair cell develo...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2012
Fumiaki Nin Tobias Reichenbach Jonathan A N Fisher A J Hudspeth

The cochlea's high sensitivity stems from the active process of outer hair cells, which possess two force-generating mechanisms: active hair-bundle motility elicited by Ca(2+) influx and somatic motility mediated by the voltage-sensitive protein prestin. Although interference with prestin has demonstrated a role for somatic motility in the active process, it remains unclear whether hair-bundle ...

2013
F.A. Carlisle S. Pearson K.P. Steel M.A. Lewis

Deafness is a genetically complex disorder with many contributing genes still unknown. Here we describe the expression of Pitpnm1 in the inner ear. It is expressed in the inner hair cells of the organ of Corti from late embryonic stages until adulthood, and transiently in the outer hair cells during early postnatal stages. Despite this specific expression, Pitpnm1 null mice showed no hearing de...

Journal: :Journal of neuroscience research 2001
T Matsunobu J W Chung J Schacht

The medial efferent system innervates outer hair cells in the organ of Corti. Neurotransmission at this synapse is mediated by acetylcholine (ACh) acting on nicotinic ACh receptors containing the alpha9 subunit. In addition to the sensory cells, the supporting cells of the mammalian cochlea also receive efferent innervation but the neurotransmitter(s) at these synapses are not known. We show sl...

Journal: :Current Biology 2000
Nian Zhang Gregory V. Martin Matthew W. Kelley Thomas Gridley

Recent studies have demonstrated that the Notch signaling pathway regulates the differentiation of sensory hair cells in the vertebrate inner ear [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9]. We have shown previously that in mice homozygous for a targeted null mutation of the Jagged2 (Jag2) gene, which encodes a Notch ligand, supernumerary hair cells differentiate in the cochlea of the inner ear [7]. Ot...

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