Actin filaments, stereocilia, and hair cells of the bird cochlea. II. Packing of actin filaments in the stereocilia and in the cuticular plate and what happens to the organization when the stereocilia are bent.
Open Access
- 1 March 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 96 (3) , 822-834
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.96.3.822
Abstract
A comparison of hair cells from different parts of the cochlea [from chicks] reveals the same organization of actin filaments; the elements that vary are the length and number of the filaments. Thin sections of stereocilia reveal that the actin filaments are hexagonally packed, and from diffraction patterns of these sections, it was found that the actin filaments are aligned such that the crossover points of adjacent actin filaments are in register. The cross-bridges that connect adjacent actin filaments are easily seen in longitudinal sections. The cross-bridges appear as regularly spaced bands that are perpendicular to the axis of the stereocilium. Particularly interesting is that when a stereocilium is bent or displaced, as might occur during stimulation by sound, the actin filaments are not compressed or stretched but slide past one another so that the bridges become tilted relative to the long axis of the actin filament bundle. In the images of bent bundles, the bands of cross-bridges are then tilted off perpendicular to the sterocilium axis. When the stereocilium is bent at its base, all cross-bridges in the stereocilium are affected. Resistance to bending or displacement must be property of the number of bridges present, which in turn is a function of the number of actin filaments present and their respective lengths. Since hair cells in different parts of the cochlea have stereocilia of different, yet predictable lengths and widths, this means that the force needed to displace the stereocilia of hair cell located at different regions of the cochlea will not be the same. Apparently, fine tuning of the hair cells must be a built-in property of the sterocilia. Perhaps its physiological vulnerability may result from changes of sterociliary structure.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Actin in the inner ear: the remarkable structure of the stereociliumNature, 1980
- The organization of actin filaments in the stereocilia of cochlear hair cells.The Journal of cell biology, 1980
- Five decades of research on cochlear mechanicsThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1980
- Anatomic correlates of noise induced hearing loss.1979
- Structure of the chicken's inner ear: SEM and TEM studyJournal of Anatomy, 1978
- The ultrastructure of the basilar papilla of the chickJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1978
- Studies on the Sensory Hairs of Receptor Cells in the Inner EarActa Oto-Laryngologica, 1977
- Proceedings: The effects of hypoxia on the tuning of single cochlear nerve fibres.1974
- Cochlear Anatomy of the Alligator LizardBrain, Behavior and Evolution, 1974
- Reconstruction of three-dimensional images from electron micrographs of structures with helical symmetryJournal of Molecular Biology, 1970