Stereocilin-deficient mice reveal the origin of cochlear waveform distortions

Archive ouverte

Verpy, Elisabeth | Weil, Dominique | Leibovici, Michel | Goodyear, Richard | Hamard, Ghislaine | Houdon, Carine | Lefèvre, Gaelle | Hardelin, Jean-Pierre | Richardson, Guy | Avan, Paul | Petit, Christine

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. Although the cochlea is an amplifier and a remarkably sensitive and finely tuned detector of sounds, it also produces conspicuous mechanical and electrical waveform distortions1. These distortions reflect nonlinear mechanical interactions within the cochlea. By allowing one tone to suppress another (masking effect), they contribute to speech intelligibility2. Tones can also combine to produce sounds with frequencies not present in the acoustic stimulus3. These sounds compose the otoacoustic emissions that are extensively used to screen hearing in newborns. Because both cochlear amplification and distortion originate from the outer hair cells-one of the two types of sensory receptor cells-it has been speculated that they stem from a common mechanism. Here we show that the nonlinearity underlying cochlear waveform distortions relies on the presence of stereocilin, a protein defective in a recessive form of human deafness4. Stereocilin was detected in association with horizontal top connectors5,6,7, lateral links that join adjacent stereocilia within the outer hair cell's hair bundle. These links were absent in stereocilin-null mutant mice, which became progressively deaf. At the onset of hearing, however, their cochlear sensitivity and frequency tuning were almost normal, although masking was much reduced and both acoustic and electrical waveform distortions were completely lacking. From this unique functional situation, we conclude that the main source of cochlear waveform distortions is a deflection-dependent hair bundle stiffness resulting from constraints imposed by the horizontal top connectors, and not from the intrinsic nonlinear behaviour of the mechanoelectrical transducer channel.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Stereocilin connects outer hair cell stereocilia to one another and to the tectorial membrane

Archive ouverte | Verpy, Elisabeth | CCSD

International audience. Stereocilin is defective in a recessive form of deafness, DFNB16. We studied the distribution of stereocilin in the developing and mature mouse inner ear and analyzed the consequences of its ...

Initial characterization of kinocilin, a protein of the hair cell kinocilium

Archive ouverte | Leibovici, Michel | CCSD

International audience. A subtracted library prepared from vestibular sensory areas [Nat. Genet. 26 (2000) 51] was used to identify a 960 bp murine transcript preferentially expressed in the inner ear and testis. Th...

Otoancorin, an inner ear protein restricted to the interface between the apical surface of sensory epithelia and their overlying acellular gels, is defective in autosomal recessive deafness DFNB22

Archive ouverte | Zwaenepoel, Ingrid | CCSD

International audience. A 3,673-bp murine cDNA predicted to encode a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein of 1,088 amino acids was isolated during a study aimed at identifying transcripts specifically expre...

Chargement des enrichissements...