Abstract

The mechanical properties of the mammalian organ of Corti determine its sensitivity to sound frequency and intensity, and the structure of supporting cells changes progressively with frequency along the cochlea. From the apex (low frequency) to the base (high frequency) of the guinea pig cochlea inner pillar cells decrease in length incrementally from 75–55 µm whilst the number of axial microtubules increases from 1,300–2,100. The respective values for outer pillar cells are 120–65 µm and 1,500–3,000. This correlates with a progressive decrease in the length of the outer hair cells from >100 µm to 20 µm. Deiters'cell bodies vary from 60–50 µm long with relatively little change in microtubule number. Their phalangeal processes reflect the lengths of outer hair cells but their microtubule numbers do not change systematically. Correlations between cell length, microtubule number and cochlear location are poor below 1 kHz. Cell stiffness was estimated from direct mechanical measurements made previously from isolated inner and outer pillar cells. We estimate that between 200 Hz and 20 kHz axial stiffness, bending stiffness and buckling limits increase, respectively,∼3, 6 and 4 fold for outer pillar cells, ∼2, 3 and 2.5 fold for inner pillar cells and ∼7, 20 and 24 fold for the phalangeal processes of Deiters'cells. There was little change in the Deiters'cell bodies for any parameter. Compensating for effective cell length the pillar cells are likely to be considerably stiffer than Deiters'cells with buckling limits 10–40 times greater. These data show a clear relationship between cell mechanics and frequency. However, measurements from single cells alone are insufficient and they must be combined with more accurate details of how the multicellular architecture influences the mechanical properties of the whole organ.

Highlights

  • The mammalian organ of Corti is an elongated sensory epithelium that lies within the cochlea and that is adapted for the detection, amplification, and analysis of sound [1]

  • It is based upon a remarkable cellular architecture composed of several morphologically distinct types of sensory hair cells and supporting cells, each with specific dimensions and cytoskeletal specializations that change progressively from the apical, low frequency end of the cochlea to the basal, high frequency end [2,3,4,5,6]

  • The organ of Corti normally includes a single row of inner hair cells and three rows of outer hair cells coupled to the basilar membrane by supporting cells (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The mammalian organ of Corti is an elongated sensory epithelium that lies within the cochlea and that is adapted for the detection, amplification, and analysis of sound [1] It is based upon a remarkable cellular architecture composed of several morphologically distinct types of sensory hair cells and supporting cells, each with specific dimensions and cytoskeletal specializations that change progressively from the apical, low frequency end of the cochlea to the basal, high frequency end [2,3,4,5,6]. Their lengths define the key structural dimensions of the sensory epithelium

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