Development of location-specific hair cell stereocilia in denervated embryonic ears
- 22 October 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Vol. 288 (4) , 529-537
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.902880402
Abstract
The developmental mechanisms that allow physiological coding of acoustic pitch have remained unexplained. Cochlear hair cells that have different structures respond to different sound frequencies and synapse with neurons that project to different locations in the brain. How do these hair cells develop appropriate structures, and how are the connections between specific hair cells and the neurons that code for their pitch sensitivities matched? We have investigated one aspect of this by denervating embryonic chicken ears, before the time of hair cell production, and then transplanting them to the aneural chorioallantoic membrane of host embryos where they have continued to develop. We report that vestibular and auditory hair cell phenotypes differentiate appropriately and that correct gradients of hair cell structural phenotypes, as expressed in stereocilia bundles, develop in the cochleae of these denervated ears. Therefore, the normal development of gradients in hair cell stereocilia properties must be controlled by location-specific cues originating in the ear itself. Neuronally directed modification of target cell phenotypes is not required for the quite specific phenotype development represented by the stereocilia bundles of individual hair cells and the connectional matching in the numerous distinct peripheral information lines of the auditory system.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Cellular Basis of Hearing: The Biophysics of Hair CellsScience, 1985
- The development of stereociliary bundles in the cochlear duct of chick embryosDevelopmental Brain Research, 1984
- Developmental Gradients in the Embryonic Chick's Basilar PapillaActa Oto-Laryngologica, 1984
- Mechanical tuning of free-standing stereociliary bundles and frequency analysis in the alligator lizard cochleaHearing Research, 1983
- A Micromechanical Contribution to Cochlear Tuning and Tonotopic OrganizationScience, 1983
- Extracellular current flow and the site of transduction by vertebrate hair cellsJournal of Neuroscience, 1982
- Synaptogene sis in the vestibular sensory epithelium of the chick embryoJournal of Neurocytology, 1980
- The Development of Hair Cells in the Embryonic Chick's Basilar PapillaActa Oto-Laryngologica, 1978
- Interactions between motoneurones and muscles in respect of the characteristic speeds of their responsesThe Journal of Physiology, 1960
- The role of the medulla in the differentiation of the otic vesicleJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1950