Reorganization of the chick basilar papilla after acoustic trauma
- 22 April 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Vol. 330 (4) , 521-532
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.903300408
Abstract
The auditory epithelium in birds and mammals consists of a postmitotic population of hair cells and supporting cells. Unlike mammals, birds can regenerate their auditory epithelia after trauma. Recent evidence indicates that supporting cells undergo mitosis after acoustic trauma, suggesting that supporting cells may transdifferentiate into hair cells. The goals of this study were to (1) characterize the responses of hair cells and supporting cells to acoustic trauma, and (2) determine whether hair cell loss is a prerequisite for generation of new hair cells. Chicks were exposed to an octave‐band noise and their inner ears assayed with fluorescence or scanning electron microscopy. In one area of the basilar papilla, defined as the center of the lesion, extensive hair cell degeneration occurred. Expanded supporting cells obliterated degenerating hair cells and invaded spaces normally occupied by hair cells. Aggregates of DNA were found within the basilar papilla, suggesting that hair cell death and disintegration may occur within the epithelium. The epithelial sheet appeared structurally confluent at all times examined. Supporting cells exhibited altered apical contour in distal regions of the basilar papilla, where hair cell damage was mild or inconspicuous. Four days after noise exposure, newly generated hair cells were found in the center of the lesion and in the distal areas, where no hair cell loss could be detected. The results suggest that supporting cells may play an important role in maintenance and repair of the traumatized basilar papilla and raise the possibility that production of new hair cells is not dependent on hair cell loss in the immediate vicinity.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Apoptosis: a different type of cell deathThe FASEB Journal, 1992
- Mechanisms of cell deathArchives of Toxicology, 1991
- Hair cell and supporting cell response to acoustic trauma in the chick cochleaHearing Research, 1990
- Possible precursors of regenerated hair cells in the avian cochlea following acoustic traumaHearing Research, 1989
- Regeneration of Sensory Hair Cells After Acoustic TraumaScience, 1988
- Cingulin, a new peripheral component of tight junctionsNature, 1988
- Regeneration of hair cell stereociliary bundles in the chick cochlea following severe acoustic traumaHearing Research, 1987
- Hair cell damage produced by acoustic trauma in the chick cochleaHearing Research, 1987
- Neurogenesis and Plasticity of the Olfactory Sensory NeuronsaAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1985
- Light and electron microscopic studies of the basilar papilla in the duck,Anas platyrhynchos. I. The hatchlingJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1984