Abstract

Recent observations regarding the non-selective action of outer hair cells contradict frequency-selective cochlear amplification. We hypothesized that active outer hair cells drive cochlear fluid circulation. The hypothesis was tested by delivering a neurotoxin, kainic acid, to the round window of young gerbil cochleae while monitoring auditory responses in the cochlear nucleus. Sounds presented at a modest level significantly expedited kainic acid delivery. When outer-hair-cell motility was suppressed by salicylate, the facilitation effect was compromised. A low-frequency tone was more effective than broadband noise, especially for drug delivery to apical locations. Computational model simulations provided the physical basis for our observation, which incorporated solute diffusion, fluid advection, fluid-structure interaction, and outer-hair-cell motility. Active outer hair cells deformed the organ of Corti like a peristaltic tube to generate apically streaming flows along the tunnel of Corti and basally streaming flows along the scala tympani. Our measurements and simulations coherently indicate that broadband outer-hair-cell action is for cochlear fluid circulation.

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