In vivo outer hair cell length changes expose the active process in the cochlea |
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Authors: | Zha Dingjun Chen Fangyi Ramamoorthy Sripriya Fridberger Anders Choudhury Niloy Jacques Steven L Wang Ruikang K Nuttall Alfred L |
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Affiliation: | Oregon Hearing Research Center, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon, United States of America. |
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Abstract: | BackgroundMammalian hearing is refined by amplification of the sound-evoked vibration of the cochlear partition. This amplification is at least partly due to forces produced by protein motors residing in the cylindrical body of the outer hair cell. To transmit power to the cochlear partition, it is required that the outer hair cells dynamically change their length, in addition to generating force. These length changes, which have not previously been measured in vivo, must be correctly timed with the acoustic stimulus to produce amplification.Methodology/Principal FindingsUsing in vivo optical coherence tomography, we demonstrate that outer hair cells in living guinea pigs have length changes with unexpected timing and magnitudes that depend on the stimulus level in the sensitive cochlea.Conclusions/SignificanceThe level-dependent length change is a necessary condition for directly validating that power is expended by the active process presumed to underlie normal hearing. |
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