TY - JOUR
T1 - Tectorial membrane morphological variation
T2 - Effects upon stimulus frequency otoacoustic emissions
AU - Bergevin, Christopher
AU - Velenovsky, David S.
AU - Bonine, Kevin E.
N1 - Funding Information:
This study demonstrates that features of SFOAEs, a noninvasive measure of auditory function, appear critically tied to local mechanical and morphological properties of the inner ear. Specifically, our results imply that the structure of the TM, in a region where the emissions are presumably being generated, likely plays an important role in determining the observed OAE properties in lizards. A lack of a TM in general leads to shorter emission delays, while species with a TM (either continuous or discretized) typically exhibit longer delays. However, at least one non-TM species exhibits relatively large delays, suggesting that additional factors could be at work across species that can affect tuning (e.g., differences in an underlying active process). In light of theoretical considerations that hypothesize that TM-coupling can lead to sharper tuning and that SFOAE delays are inversely proportional to auditory filter bandwidths, our results generally support these predictions, but with the added caveat that there might be an optimal amount of TM coupling: too little or too much can lead to broadened tuning. Given the significant differences that exist between the lizard inner ear and the mammalian cochlea, the functional role of the TM could very well be different between these two groups. Whereas in lizards the TM's primary role might be to help overcome viscous forces and thereby sharpen mechanical tuning, the TM in mammals could have the added role of coupling energy longitudinally along the length of the cochlea. Regardless, further understanding of emission generation mechanisms in nonmammals will inevitably lead to deeper insights into the function of the mammalian ear. J. Jarchow and N. McMullen provided veterinary assistance. G. Manley and C. Shera provided encouragement and technical assistance. Comments from A. J. Aranyosi, A. J. Hudspeth, L. Jones, J. Rosowski, C. Shera, and two anonymous reviewers improved upon an earlier draft. The Green Diamond Resource Company, E. Bjorkstedt, K. M. Bonine, and the Arizona Game and Fish Department facilitated lizard procurement. Financial support came from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (grant No. 52003749), the National Science Foundation Division of Mathematical Sciences (grant No. 0602173), and the National Institutes of Health (grant No. R01 DC3687).
PY - 2010/8/9
Y1 - 2010/8/9
N2 - The tectorial membrane (TM) is widely believed to play an important role in determining the ear's ability to detect and resolve incoming acoustic information. While it is still unclear precisely what that role is, the TM has been hypothesized to help overcome viscous forces and thereby sharpen mechanical tuning of the sensory cells. Lizards present a unique opportunity to further study the role of the TM given the diverse inner-ear morphological differences across species. Furthermore, stimulus-frequency otoacoustic emissions (SFOAEs), sounds emitted by the ear in response to a tone, noninvasively probe the frequency selectivity of the ear. We report estimates of auditory tuning derived from SFOAEs for 12 different species of lizards with widely varying TM morphology. Despite gross anatomical differences across the species examined herein, low-level SFOAEs were readily measurable in all ears tested, even in non-TM species whose basilar papilla contained as few as 50-60 hair cells. Our measurements generally support theoretical predictions: longer delays/sharper tuning features are found in species with a TM relative to those without. However, SFOAEs from at least one non-TM species (Anolis) with long delays suggest there are likely additional micromechanical factors at play that can directly affect tuning. Additionally, in the one species examined with a continuous TM (Aspidoscelis) where cell-to-cell coupling is presumably relatively stronger, delays were intermediate. This observation appears consistent with recent reports that suggest the TM may play a more complex macromechanical role in the mammalian cochlea via longitudinal energy distribution (and thereby affect tuning). Although significant differences exist between reptilian and mammalian auditory biophysics, understanding lizard OAE generation mechanisms yields significant insight into fundamental principles at work in all vertebrate ears.
AB - The tectorial membrane (TM) is widely believed to play an important role in determining the ear's ability to detect and resolve incoming acoustic information. While it is still unclear precisely what that role is, the TM has been hypothesized to help overcome viscous forces and thereby sharpen mechanical tuning of the sensory cells. Lizards present a unique opportunity to further study the role of the TM given the diverse inner-ear morphological differences across species. Furthermore, stimulus-frequency otoacoustic emissions (SFOAEs), sounds emitted by the ear in response to a tone, noninvasively probe the frequency selectivity of the ear. We report estimates of auditory tuning derived from SFOAEs for 12 different species of lizards with widely varying TM morphology. Despite gross anatomical differences across the species examined herein, low-level SFOAEs were readily measurable in all ears tested, even in non-TM species whose basilar papilla contained as few as 50-60 hair cells. Our measurements generally support theoretical predictions: longer delays/sharper tuning features are found in species with a TM relative to those without. However, SFOAEs from at least one non-TM species (Anolis) with long delays suggest there are likely additional micromechanical factors at play that can directly affect tuning. Additionally, in the one species examined with a continuous TM (Aspidoscelis) where cell-to-cell coupling is presumably relatively stronger, delays were intermediate. This observation appears consistent with recent reports that suggest the TM may play a more complex macromechanical role in the mammalian cochlea via longitudinal energy distribution (and thereby affect tuning). Although significant differences exist between reptilian and mammalian auditory biophysics, understanding lizard OAE generation mechanisms yields significant insight into fundamental principles at work in all vertebrate ears.
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UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=77958177715&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.bpj.2010.06.012
DO - 10.1016/j.bpj.2010.06.012
M3 - Article
C2 - 20712989
AN - SCOPUS:77958177715
SN - 0006-3495
VL - 99
SP - 1064
EP - 1072
JO - Biophysical Journal
JF - Biophysical Journal
IS - 4
ER -