The organization of tip links and stereocilia on hair cells of bird and lizard basilar papillae

J. O. Pickles, J. Brix, S. D. Comis, O. Gleich, C. Köppl, G. A. Manley, M. P. Osborne

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

46 Scopus citations

Abstract

Auditory papillae from three species of bird (pigeon, starling, and chick), and two species of European lizard (Podarcis muralis andPodarcis sicula) were examined by scanning electron microscopy. Hair bundles from all papillae showed tip links oriented along the direction of gradation in heights of the stereocilia (i.e. parallel to the hair-cell axis of bilateral symmetry, and so parallel to the excitatory-inhibitory axis for mechanotransduction). This orientation was seen irrespective of the overall orientation of the hair bundle within the papilla. The stereocilia formed columns, joined by the tip links, which ran parallel to the hair-cell axis of bilateral symmetry. The stereocilia within the same column tended to stay together, while those in different columns tended to separate during preparation. In many columns all the stereocilia tended to be a little taller, or a little shorter, than the equivalent stereocilia in adjacent columns, suggesting that all the stereocilia within one column had been affected by a common height determinant during development. In addition, links running laterally between stereocilia were seen, in a band near the base of the stereocilia. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that tip links are a universal feature of mechano-transducing acousticolateral hair cells, and that they are involved in sensory transduction. The results also support suggestions that the tip links may play a role in determining the heights of the stereocilia during development.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)31-41
Number of pages11
JournalHearing Research
Volume41
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 1989

Keywords

  • bird
  • development
  • hair cell
  • link
  • lizard
  • papilla
  • stereocilia
  • tip link
  • transduction

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