Porosity controls spread of excitation in tectorial membrane traveling waves.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Cochlear frequency selectivity plays a key role in our ability to understand speech, and is widely believed to be associated with cochlear amplification. However, genetic studies targeting the tectorial membrane (TM) have demonstrated both sharper and broader tuning with no obvious changes in hair bundle or somatic motility mechanisms. For example, cochlear tuning of Tectb(-/-) mice is significantly sharper than that of Tecta(Y1870C/+) mice, even though TM stiffnesses are similarly reduced relative to wild-type TMs. Here we show that differences in TM viscosity can account for these differences in tuning. In the basal cochlear turn, nanoscale pores of Tecta(Y1870C/+) TMs are significantly larger than those of Tectb(-/-) TMs. The larger pore size reduces shear viscosity (by ∼70%), thereby reducing traveling wave speed and increasing spread of excitation. These results demonstrate the previously unrecognized importance of TM porosity in cochlear and neural tuning.
منابع مشابه
Longitudinal spread of mechanical excitation through tectorial membrane traveling waves.
The mammalian inner ear separates sounds by their frequency content, and this separation underlies important properties of human hearing, including our ability to understand speech in noisy environments. Studies of genetic disorders of hearing have demonstrated a link between frequency selectivity and wave properties of the tectorial membrane (TM). To understand these wave properties better, we...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Biophysical journal
دوره 106 6 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2014