4.7 Article

Cochlear motion across the reticular lamina implies that it is not a stiff plate

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-23525-x

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Funding

  1. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders [R01DC07910]

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This study used optical coherence tomography to measure the motion of outer hair cells in the cochlea and found that the gain of the third row near the pillar-cell heads was more than three times greater than that of the first row. This implies that the reticular lamina, composed of outer hair cells and supporting cells, is more flexible than the cells connected to its bottom surface, supporting a mosaic-like bending and stretching of the cochlear structure.
Within the cochlea, the basilar membrane (BM) is coupled to the reticular lamina (RL) through three rows of piezo-like outer hair cells (OHCs) and supporting cells that endow mammals with sensitive hearing. Anatomical differences across OHC rows suggest differences in their motion. Using optical coherence tomography, we measured in vivo and postmortem displacements through the gerbil round-window membrane from approximately the 40-47 kHz best-frequency (BF) regions. Our high spatial resolution allowed measurements across the RL surface at the tops of the three rows of individual OHCs and their bottoms, and across the BM. RL motion varied radially; the third-row gain was more than 3 times greater than that of the first row near BF, whereas the OHC-bottom motions remained similar. This implies that the RL mosaic, comprised of OHC and phalangeal-process tops joined together by adhesion molecules, is much more flexible than the Deiters' cells connected to the OHCs at their bottom surfaces. Postmortem, the measured points moved together approximately in phase. These imply that in vivo, the RL does not move as a stiff plate hinging around the pillar-cell heads near the first row as has been assumed, but that its mosaic-like structure may instead bend and/or stretch.

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