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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Possible Ca 2+ -dependent mechanism of apical outer hair cell modulation within the cochlea of the guinea pig
Jan MaurerWolf J. MannUlf-rüdiger Heinrichsubject
HistologyTectorial membraneBarium CompoundsGuinea PigsCesiumchemistry.chemical_elementPerilymphCalciumPathology and Forensic MedicineChloridesmedicineAnimalsChemical PrecipitationChannel blockerCochleaLamina reticularisCell BiologyAnatomyCalcium Channel BlockersPerilymphHair Cells Auditory OuterMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryOrgan of CortiBiophysicsCalciumHair cellElectron Probe Microanalysisdescription
Calcium ions were precipitated with potassium antimonate after injection of the inorganic calcium channel blocker MnCl2 or the inorganic potassium channel blockers BaCl2 or CsCl into the perilymph of the scala vestibuli of the guinea pig. The spatial distribution of the formed histochemical reaction products within the organ of Corti was studied by energy-filtering transmission-electron microscopy. Compared with untreated control ears, the number of the formed precipitates drastically increased at the extracellular side of the lamina reticularis after application of the various inorganic channel blockers. The apical side of the outer hair cells and the intervening Deiter cells were covered by a thick layer of calcium precipitates, whereas the number of histochemical reaction products was clearly reduced in the nearby acellular tectorial membrane. The high calcium content within the formed reaction products at the lamina reticularis could be demonstrated by elemental mapping and by electron energy-loss spectroscopy. To ascertain the alterations in the amounts of the calcium precipitates within the tectorial membrane after application of the various inorganic channel blockers, the precipitate densities were determined semiquantitatively by an image processing system and the values obtained compared with those of untreated control specimens. The observed histochemical results are in good agreement with published electrophysiological findings concerning the spatial distribution of ion channels located at the apical outer hair cell membrane. The detected alterations in the spatial distribution of calcium precipitates might correspond to calcium-dependent processes involved in outer hair cell modulation.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1998-03-18 | Cell and Tissue Research |