Litcius/Paper detail

Hair cell regeneration, reinnervation, and restoration of hearing thresholds in the avian hearing organ

Mitsuo Satõ, Nesrine Benkafadar, Stefan Heller

2024Cell Reports16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hearing starts, at the cellular level, with mechanoelectrical transduction by sensory hair cells. Sound information is then transmitted via afferent synaptic connections with auditory neurons. Frequency information is encoded by the location of hair cells along the cochlear duct. Loss of hair cells, synapses, or auditory neurons leads to permanent hearing loss in mammals. Birds, in contrast, regenerate auditory hair cells and functionally recover from hearing loss. Here, we characterized regeneration and reinnervation in sisomicin-deafened chickens and found that afferent neurons contact regenerated hair cells at the tips of basal projections. In contrast to development, synaptic specializations are established at these locations distant from the hair cells' bodies. The protrusions then contracted as regenerated hair cells matured and became functional 2 weeks post-deafening. We found that auditory thresholds recovered after 4-5 weeks. We interpret the regeneration-specific synaptic reestablishment as a location-preserving process that might be needed to maintain tonotopic fidelity.

Topics & Concepts

ReinnervationHair cellRegeneration (biology)AudiologyBiologyHearing lossInner earMedicineNeuroscienceAnatomyCochleaCell biologyHearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, GeneticsBat Biology and Ecology StudiesMarine animal studies overview