By Karin Söderlund Leifler, Communications Officer within Medicine and Science, Linkoping University
In order to hear sounds, we must convert sound waves, which are compressions and decompressions of air, into electrical nerve signals that are transmitted to the brain. This conversion takes place in the part of the inner ear known as the cochlea.
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The cochlear duct houses the hearing organ, with many hair cells that are divided into outer and inner hair cells. The outer hair cells amplify sound vibrations, which enables us to hear faint sounds and perceive the various frequencies in human speech better. The inner hair cells convert the sound vibrations into nerve signals. In the current study, the researchers have investigated how the conversion takes place. It is, namely, still unclear how the inner hair cells are stimulated by sound vibrations in order to produce nerve signals. An article detailing the research appears on the Linkoping University (LiU) website.
Illustration A shows how the relationship between the inner hair cells (pink), the outer hair cells (green), and the tectorial membrane (white) is usually depicted, with a gap between the membrane and the inner hair cells. Illustration B shows the discovery of the researchers with all of the hair cell stereocilia completely embedded in the tectorial membrane, and the calcium ducts (blue) that transport calcium ions to the hair cells. Sanna Hedin
It has long been known that the outer hair cells are connected to a membrane that rests on top of them. The outer hair cells have hair-like protrusions known as stereocilia that are bent and activated when sound causes the membrane and the hearing organ to vibrate. However, the current view is that the stereocilia of the inner hair cells are not in contact with this membrane, which is known as the tectorial membrane, and that they are stimulated by sounds by a completely different mechanism. It is this model that the new study challenges.
The relationship between the hair cells and the tectorial membrane has been studied in detail by electron microscopy since the 1950s. But it is extremely difficult to investigate how this gelatinous membrane functions, since it shrinks as soon as it is removed from the ear. This makes it extremely difficult to preserve the relationship between the inner hair cells and the tectorial membrane. In addition, this membrane is transparent, and has therefore been essentially invisible. Until now. The LiU researchers noticed that the tectorial membrane reflected green light. This discovery made it possible to visualize the tectorial membrane by microscope.
Confocal micrograph of stereocilia on the inner (IHC) and outer (OHCs) hair cells, completely embedded in the tectorial membrane (TM). Pierre Hakizimana
“We cannot see any gap between the tectorial membrane and the hair cells. In contrast, the stereocilia on both outer and inner hair cells are completely embedded in the tectorial membrane. Our results are incompatible with the generally accepted idea that only the outer hair cells are in contact with the tectorial membrane,” said Pierre Hakizimana, principal research engineer at the Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences at Linköping University, and principal author of the article which is published in the scientific journal Nature Communications.
Time to update the textbooks?
Pierre Hakizimana and his colleagues have studied the inner ear of guinea pigs, which is very similar to that of humans. When the researchers investigated the relationship between the membrane and the hair cells in more detail, they made a further discovery.
Pierre Hakizimana, principal research engineer at Linköping University. Sanna Hedin
“We found calcium ducts with an appearance that we’ve never seen before. These calcium ducts span the tectorial membrane and connect to the stereocilia of both the inner and the outer hair cells,” said Hakizimana.
The research group, led by Professor Anders Fridberger, has previously discovered that the tectorial membrane functions as a reservoir for calcium ions, which are needed for the hair cells to convert the sound-evoked vibrations into nerve signals. The researchers followed the motion of the calcium ions in the ducts, and their results suggest that the calcium ions flow through the ducts to the hair cells. This may explain how the hair cells obtain the large amounts of calcium ions needed for their function. The study has also shown that the stereocilia on the inner and outer hair cells are bent by the tectorial membrane in similar ways. The next step of the research will be to understand in more detail how the calcium ions are transported, and identify the protein or proteins that make up the newly discovered calcium ducts.
“Our results allow us to describe a mechanism for how hearing functions, that is incompatible with the model that has been accepted for more than fifty years. The classic illustrations in the textbooks showing the hearing organ and how it functions must be updated. The mathematical models used in research to study hearing should also be updated to include these new findings,” said Hakizimana.
New information about how our hearing functions may in the long term be important for the development of cochlear implants. These are hearing aids that are inserted into the cochlea and which use electrical stimulation to make it possible for children and adults with hearing loss to perceive sounds.
Pierre Hakizimana is one of the researchers behind the study. Thor Balkhed
“Cochlear implants are an amazing solution for treating hearing loss, but they can be improved. A deeper understanding of how the inner hair cells are stimulated by sounds is important to optimize how cochlear implants stimulate the auditory nerve,” said Hakizimana.
The study has received financial support from the Tysta Skolan Foundation, the Swedish Research Council, and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the US.
Original Paper: Hakizimana P, Fridberger A. Inner hair cell stereocilia are embedded in the tectorial membrane. Nature Communications. 2021;12(2604).
Source: LiU, Nature Communications
Images: LiU, Sanna Hedin, Pierre Hakizimana, Thor Balkhed