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An unusually powerful mode of low-frequency sound interference due to defective hair bundles of the auditory outer hair cells.


ABSTRACT: A detrimental perceptive consequence of damaged auditory sensory hair cells consists in a pronounced masking effect exerted by low-frequency sounds, thought to occur when auditory threshold elevation substantially exceeds 40 dB. Here, we identified the submembrane scaffold protein Nherf1 as a hair-bundle component of the differentiating outer hair cells (OHCs). Nherf1(-/-) mice displayed OHC hair-bundle shape anomalies in the mid and basal cochlea, normally tuned to mid- and high-frequency tones, and mild (22-35 dB) hearing-threshold elevations restricted to midhigh sound frequencies. This mild decrease in hearing sensitivity was, however, discordant with almost nonresponding OHCs at the cochlear base as assessed by distortion-product otoacoustic emissions and cochlear microphonic potentials. Moreover, unlike wild-type mice, responses of Nherf1(-/-) mice to high-frequency (20-40 kHz) test tones were not masked by tones of neighboring frequencies. Instead, efficient maskers were characterized by their frequencies up to two octaves below the probe-tone frequency, unusually low intensities up to 25 dB below probe-tone level, and growth-of-masker slope (2.2 dB/dB) reflecting their compressive amplification. Together, these properties do not fit the current acknowledged features of a hypersensitivity of the basal cochlea to lower frequencies, but rather suggest a previously unidentified mechanism. Low-frequency maskers, we propose, may interact within the unaffected cochlear apical region with midhigh frequency sounds propagated there via a mode possibly using the persistent contact of misshaped OHC hair bundles with the tectorial membrane. Our findings thus reveal a source of misleading interpretations of hearing thresholds and of hypervulnerability to low-frequency sound interference.

SUBMITTER: Kamiya K 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4078795 | biostudies-literature | 2014 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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An unusually powerful mode of low-frequency sound interference due to defective hair bundles of the auditory outer hair cells.

Kamiya Kazusaku K   Michel Vincent V   Giraudet Fabrice F   Riederer Brigitte B   Foucher Isabelle I   Papal Samantha S   Perfettini Isabelle I   Le Gal Sébastien S   Verpy Elisabeth E   Xia Weiliang W   Seidler Ursula U   Georgescu Maria-Magdalena MM   Avan Paul P   El-Amraoui Aziz A   Petit Christine C  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20140611 25


A detrimental perceptive consequence of damaged auditory sensory hair cells consists in a pronounced masking effect exerted by low-frequency sounds, thought to occur when auditory threshold elevation substantially exceeds 40 dB. Here, we identified the submembrane scaffold protein Nherf1 as a hair-bundle component of the differentiating outer hair cells (OHCs). Nherf1(-/-) mice displayed OHC hair-bundle shape anomalies in the mid and basal cochlea, normally tuned to mid- and high-frequency tones  ...[more]

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