| Literature DB >> 17978038 |
M Eugenia Chiappe1, Andrei S Kozlov, A J Hudspeth.
Abstract
The hair cells in the mammalian cochlea are of two distinct types. Inner hair cells are responsible for transducing mechanical stimuli into electrical responses, which they forward to the brain through a copious afferent innervation. Outer hair cells, which are thought to mediate the active process that sensitizes and tunes the cochlea, possess a negligible afferent innervation. For every inner hair cell, there are approximately three outer hair cells, so only one-quarter of the hair cells directly deliver information to the CNS. Although this is a surprising feature for a sensory system, the occurrence of a similar innervation pattern in birds and crocodilians suggests that the arrangement has an adaptive value. Using a lizard with highly developed hearing, the tokay gecko, we demonstrate in the present study that the same principle operates in a third major group of terrestrial animals. We propose that the differentiation of hair cells into signaling and amplifying classes reflects incompatible strategies for the optimization of mechanoelectrical transduction and of an active process based on active hair-bundle motility.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17978038 PMCID: PMC2151837 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3679-07.2007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci ISSN: 0270-6474 Impact factor: 6.167