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Axial and transverse stiffness measures of cochlear outer hair cells suggest a common mechanical basis
Authors:M Ulfendahl  Eliza Chan  William B McConnaughey  Scott Prost-Domasky  Elliot L Elson
Institution:(1) ENT Research Laboratory, King Gustaf V Research Institute, Karolinska Hospital, S-171 76 Stockholm, Sweden, SE;(2) Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Karolinska Institute, S-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden, SE;(3) Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA, US;(4) Department of Communication and Neuroscience, University of Keele, Keele, Staffordshire ST5 5BG, UK, GB
Abstract: The function of the hearing organ is based on mechanical processes occurring at the cellular level. The mechanical properties of guinea-pig isolated sensory cells were investigated using two different techniques. The stiffness of the outer hair cells along the longitudinal axis was measured by compressing the cell body using stiffness-calibrated quartz fibres. For cells with a mean length of 69 μm, the mean axial compression stiffness was 1.1±0.8 mN/m (±SD). There was an inverse relation between stiffness and cell length. The stiffness of the cell membrane perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the sensory cell was measured by indenting the cell membrane with a known force. The mean lateral indentation stiffness was 3.3±1.5 mN/m (±SD) for cells with a mean length of 64 μm. Longer cells were less stiff than short cells. Modelling the hair cell as a shell with bending resistance, finite element calculations demonstrated that the axial compression stiffness correlated well with the lateral indentation stiffness, and that a simple isotropic model is sufficient to explain the experimental observations despite the different stress strain states produced by the two techniques. The results imply that the two different stiffness properties may originate from the same cytoskeletal structures. It is suggested that the mechanical properties of the outer hair cells are designed to influence the sound-induced motion of the reticular lamina. In such a system, stiffness changes of the outer hair cell bodies could actively control the efficiency of the mechanical coupling between the basilar membrane and the important mechanoelectrical transduction sites at the surface of the hearing organ. Received: 12 June 1997/Received after revision: 13 November 1997/Accepted: 19 January 1998
Keywords:  Auditory  Cochlea  Hearing  Mechanical  Sensory  Stiffness
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