Scientists Show How Tiny Cells Deliver Big Sound in
Cochlea
October 2009
Editor: Do you think we'll ever understand EVERYTHING about how we
hear? I used to think we pretty much knew how it all happened. But I see
articles all the time that explain new discoveries that reveal critical
processes in hearing. Here's the latest from researchers at Johns Hopkins.
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Deep in the ear, 95 percent of the cells that shuttle sound to the
brain are big, boisterous neurons that, to date, have explained most of
what scientists know about how hearing works. Whether a rare,
whisper-small second set of cells also carry signals from the inner ear to
the brain and have a real role in processing sound has been a matter of
debate.
Now, reporting on rat experiments in the Oct. 22 issue of Nature, a
Johns Hopkins team says it has, for what is believed to be the first time,
managed to measure and record the elusive electrical activity of the type
II neurons in the snail-shell-like structure called the cochlea. And it
turns out the cells do indeed carry signals from the ear to the brain, and
the sounds they likely respond to would need to be loud, such as sirens or
alarms that might be even be described as painful or traumatic.
The researchers say they've also discovered that these sensory cells
get the job done by responding to glutamate released from sensory hair
cells of the inner ear. Glutamate is a workhorse neurotransmitter
throughout the nervous system and it excites the cochlear neurons to carry
acoustic information to the brain.
"No one thought recording them was even possible," says Paul A. Fuchs,
Ph.D., the John E. Bordley Professor of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck
Surgery and co-director of the Center for Sensory Biology in the Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine, and a co-author of the report. "We
knew the type II neurons were there and now at last we know something
about what they do and how they do it."
Working with week-old rats, neuroscience graduate student Catherine
Weisz removed live, soft tissue from the fragile cochlea and, guided by a
powerful microscope, touched electrodes to the tiny type II nerve endings
beneath the sensory hair cells. Different types of stimuli were used to
activate sensory hair cells, allowing Weisz to record and analyze the
resulting signals in type II fibers.
Results showed that, unlike type I neurons which are electrically
activated by the quietest sounds we hear, and which saturate as sounds get
louder, each type II neuron would need to be hit hard by a very loud sound
to produce excitation, Fuchs says.
The cell bodies of both type I and type II neurons sprout long
filaments, or axons that head to the brain, and some others that connect
to sensory hair cells. Unlike the big type I neurons, each of which make
one little sprout that touches one sensory hair cell in one spot, the type
II cells have projections that contact dozens of hair cells over a
relatively great distance.
"Somewhat counter-intuitively, the type II cell that contacts many hair
cells receives surprisingly little synaptic input," Fuchs says.
"In fact, all of its many contacts put together yield less input than that
provided by the one single hair cell touching a type I neuron."
Fuchs and his team postulate that the two systems may serve different
functional roles. "There's a distinct difference between analyzing sound
to extract meaning - Is that a cat meowing, a baby crying or a man
singing? - versus the startle reflex triggered by a thunderclap or other
sudden loud sound." Type II afferents may play a role in such reflexive
withdrawals from potential trauma."
This study was supported by the National Institute on Deafness and
Other Communication Disorders, and a grant from the Blaustein Pain
Foundation of Johns Hopkins.
Authors on the paper are Fuchs, Weisz andElisabeth Glowatzki, all of
the Center for Hearing and Balance and the Center for Sensory Biology,
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.