The long-term goal of these studies is to identify the physical basis of outer hair cell electromotility. The outer hair cell enhances the sensitivity and frequency selectivity of mammalian hearing by converting the energy of hair energy. The motor is known to reside in the outer hair cell's lateral wall, a 100 nanometer thick, three-layer structure composed of two membranes with a cytoskeletal network sandwiched between them. The specific objective of this project period is to identify the contributions of the lateral wall to the modulation and maintenance of the electrochemical gradient necessary for cell function, specifically electromotility. Coordinated theoretical and experimental approaches identify how the unique molecular organization of the lateral wall influences the transport of ions, water and other molecules through the narrow space between the membranes. The contribution of cholesterol and other lipids to the lateral wall membranes wil be examined to determine how they affect electromotility and membrane permeability. The relative electromotile movement of the membranes will be measured with the goal of determining the motor location. The effect of genetically removing specific cytoskeletal proteins on electromotility will be measured. Methods include outer hair cell isolation from normal and geneticall altered animals; voltage-clamp with voltage-sensitive dyes and two-pipette recording; measuring the flow of fluorescent markers with confocal microscopy; video microscopy and photometric measures of displacement; and computational modeling. Changes in outer hair cell electromotility will be ascertained in animal models by measuring otoacoustic emissions. New medical treatments for hearing disorders associated with high cholesterol may be suggested if it is found they result from a direct action on the lateral wall. The deafness found in mice with genetically induced deficits of specific cytoskeletal proteins ha implications for the molecular basis of other forms of hereditary sensory-neural hearing loss. Clarification of the physical principles underlying electromotility will also contribute to the emerging field of biological nanotechnology.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01DC000354-16
Application #
6516062
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-HAR (03))
Program Officer
Donahue, Amy
Project Start
1990-04-01
Project End
2003-06-30
Budget Start
2002-07-01
Budget End
2003-06-30
Support Year
16
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
$547,132
Indirect Cost
Name
Baylor College of Medicine
Department
Otolaryngology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
074615394
City
Houston
State
TX
Country
United States
Zip Code
77030
Yellin, Florence; Li, Yizeng; Sreenivasan, Varun K A et al. (2018) Electromechanics and Volume Dynamics in Nonexcitable Tissue Cells. Biophys J 114:2231-2242
Brownell, William E (2017) What Is Electromotility? -The History of Its Discovery and Its Relevance to Acoustics. Acoust Today 13:20-27
Seymour, Michelle L; Rajagopalan, Lavanya; Duret, Guillaume et al. (2016) Membrane prestin expression correlates with the magnitude of prestin-associated charge movement. Hear Res 339:50-9
Araya, Mussie; Brownell, William E (2016) Nanotechnology in Auditory Research: Membrane Electromechanics in Hearing. Methods Mol Biol 1427:349-62
Yamashita, Tetsuji; Hakizimana, Pierre; Wu, Siva et al. (2015) Outer Hair Cell Lateral Wall Structure Constrains the Mobility of Plasma Membrane Proteins. PLoS Genet 11:e1005500
Harland, Ben; Lee, Wen-han; Brownell, William E et al. (2015) The potential and electric field in the cochlear outer hair cell membrane. Med Biol Eng Comput 53:405-13
Powers, Richard J; Kulason, Sue; Atilgan, Erdinc et al. (2014) The local forces acting on the mechanotransduction channel in hair cell stereocilia. Biophys J 106:2519-28
Farrell, Brenda; Qian, Feng; Kolomeisky, Anatoly et al. (2013) Measuring forces at the leading edge: a force assay for cell motility. Integr Biol (Camb) 5:204-14
Cai, Tiantian; Seymour, Michelle L; Zhang, Hongyuan et al. (2013) Conditional deletion of Atoh1 reveals distinct critical periods for survival and function of hair cells in the organ of Corti. J Neurosci 33:10110-22
Xia, Anping; Song, Yohan; Wang, Rosalie et al. (2013) Prestin regulation and function in residual outer hair cells after noise-induced hearing loss. PLoS One 8:e82602

Showing the most recent 10 out of 50 publications