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Prestin-based outer hair cell motility is necessary for mammalian cochlear amplification
Authors:Dallos Peter  Wu Xudong  Cheatham Mary Ann  Gao Jiangang  Zheng Jing  Anderson Charles T  Jia Shuping  Wang Xiang  Cheng Wendy H Y  Sengupta Soma  He David Z Z  Zuo Jian
Institution:Department of Neurobiology and Physiology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208, USA. p-dallos@northwestern.edu
Abstract:It is a central tenet of cochlear neurobiology that mammalian ears rely on a local, mechanical amplification process for their high sensitivity and sharp frequency selectivity. While it is generally agreed that outer hair cells provide the amplification, two mechanisms have been proposed: stereociliary motility and somatic motility. The latter is driven by the motor protein prestin. Electrophysiological phenotyping of a prestin knockout mouse intimated that somatic motility is the amplifier. However, outer hair cells of knockout mice have significantly altered mechanical properties, making this mouse model unsatisfactory. Here, we study a mouse model without alteration to outer hair cell and organ of Corti mechanics or to mechanoelectric transduction, but with diminished prestin function. These animals have knockout-like behavior, demonstrating that prestin-based electromotility is required for cochlear amplification.
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