W9 - Neuro: Auditory & Vestibular Systems Flashcards

1
Q

What is the basic architecture of a hair cell?

A

Overlying extracellular matrix, which has different names in different systems:
-Tectorial membrane (in auditory organs),
-otoconial membrane (in maculae)
-Cupula (in cristae)
Hair bundles on luminal surface sitting on top of hair cells. These hair cells have a synapse attached to it nerve fibre that projects to the brain. There are supporting cells there too on top of basal lamina.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

What are Stereocilia bundles?

A
  • Stereocilia are arranged in ‘bundles’ (e.g. 30-300 stereocilia in each bundle in the ear)
  • Within the bundle stereocilia can be connected via a number of links. The things that bind them together are:
  • Lateral-link Connectors: top connectors, shaft connectors and ankle links.
  • Tip links: Found at the top of the cilia
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

What are lateral link connectors (stereocilia bundles)?

A

Lateral-link connectors between the shafts of stereocilia hold the bundle together to allow it to move as a unit. So when one moves, they all move.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

What are tip links (stereocilia bundles)

A
  • Tension in the ‘Tip-links’ distorts the tip of the stereocilia mechanically
  • This distortion allows channels to open and close with cilia movement. Current flows in
    proportionately.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

How do Tip-links connected to ion channels?

A
  • ‘Tip-links’ open ion-channels.
  • Endolymph high in K+.
  • Potassium ion (K+) influx depolarises the cell by making it more positive.
  • Voltage gated Ca2+ channels open.
  • Ca2+ triggers neurotransmitter release at the synapse.
  • Post-synaptic potential in nerve fibre triggers an action potential

This basically means when the hair moves in one direction, tip links pull, the K+ gates open and the accumulated K+ at the top can enter the cells. When it moves in the other direction, these gates close and the K+ are not able to enter.

Displacement of the cilia causes a change in membrane potential.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

How are hair cells used as water motion detectors: fish and amphibians

A

Hair cells as water motion detectors: The lateral line system
* Most fish and amphibians have a lateral line system along both sides of their body.
* Mechanoreceptors provides information about movement through water or the direction and velocity of water flow.
* Important for schooling.

  • Some mechanoreceptors, or neuromasts are in canals. Water can flow through these and interact with superfical neuromasts on the surface.
  • Neuromasts function similarly to mammalian inner ear.
  • A gelatinous cupula encases the hair cell bundle and moves in response to water motion.
  • Most amphibians are born (i.e. tadpoles) with lateral lines.
  • Some (e.g. salamander) lose them inadulthood.
  • More aquatic living species retain them.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

How are hair cells in mammals used in the auditory and vestibular system?

A

Hair cells in mammals: The auditory and vestibular systems.
The inner ear: The auditory and vestibular systems
The inner ear is formed of:
* Semicircular canals (vestibular system)
* Cochlea (auditory system)

Vestibulocochlear or 8th Cranial Nerve (Vestibular and cochlear nerve)
Semicircular canals (Vestibular system)
Cochlea (Auditory system)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

What is the vestibular system?

A

The vestibular system: balance and motion in
mammals.
It does this by translating movements, velocity and rotation into electrical activity to be able to explain.

Linear motion: up/down, left/right, backwards/forwards.
a) Positive x-axis translation: moving forward
b) Positive y-axis translation: moving left
c) Positive z-axis translation: moving up

Rotation: roll, pitch, yaw.
a) Roll: Rotation around x-axis: side ways roll
b) Pitch: Rotation around y axis: Forward roll
c) Yaw: Rotation around z axis :sitting on the spot

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

How do we sense rotation?

A

Semicircular canals: sensing rotation?
* Rotation causes fluid motion in the semicircular canals.
* Hair cells at different canals entrances register different directions.
- Posterior semi-circular canal, allows flow of fluid.
- Anterior semicircular canal, allows for determining the rotation of the head around a lateral axis such as when a person nods their head up and down
- Horizontal canal, the rotation of yaw is captured.

  • Cilia are connected to the gelantinous cupula.
  • Under motion, fluid in the canals lags to due to inertia, pulling the cupula in the opposite direction to the rotation of the head.
  • Cilia are displaced, depolarising hair cells.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

What are the otolith organs?

A

Orientation and motion in mammals
*In the otolith organs they are sensitive to linear acceleration.
* Gravity is also acceleration.
- Ultricular macula: left and right
- Circular macula: backward and forward and up and down.

How the otolith organs work
* Hair cells are topped by a rigid layer of otoconia crystals.
* Under acceleration the crystal layer is displaced, deflecting the cilia.
The crystals would move opposite to whichever direction we travel, which then gets detected.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

What is the auditory system?

A

Sound: rapid variation of air pressure
* Longitudinal pressure waves in the atmosphere.
* Imagine a slinky spring being pushed and pulled along its length.

The ear translated changes in air pressure, which all sounds into motion of fluid within the cochlea. This translates to electrical activity and send it to cochlear nucleus. This goes to the olivary complex -> lateral leminiscus -> inferior colliculus -> medial geniculate body -> auditory cortex

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

What are the wavelengths and frequency?

A

There are longitudinal pressure waves in the atmosphere.
* The rate at which the compression and rarefaction of a wave occur determine the distance between two peaks in the wave (wavelength) and the rate at which the pressure cycles between compression and
rarefaction (frequency).
* Frequency and wavelength are inversely related.
λ = c/f
c = speed of sound (344m/s)
f = frequency
λ = wavelength

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

What are the various sound level?

A
  • The difference in amplitudes between the
    quietest sounds we can hear is massive
  • Normal air pressure: 100k Pascals.
  • We can hear a .000000001% change in pressure.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

What are the sound pressure levels?

A
  • the decibel scale:a “log” of ratio relative to 20uPa:
    20log 10(amplitude/20)

20uPa 0dB SPL
200uPa 20dB SPL
2000 uPa 40dB SPL etc.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

What is the pinna?

A

The outer ear.
* Size and shape varies from person to person.
*Gathers sound from the environment and funnels it to the eardrum.
*Made entirely of cartilage and covered with skin.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

How does the pinna filter?

A

*The outer ear filters, influencing the frequency response.
*Pinna features influence the entering sound differently.
- Flange
-Meatus
-Concha

17
Q

What is microtia?

A

*Grade I: A less than complete development of
the external ear with identifiable structures and a small but present external ear canal
*Grade II: A partially developed ear (usually the
top portion is underdeveloped) with a closed
stenotic external ear canal producing a
conductive hearing loss.
*Grade III: Absence of the external ear with a
small peanut-like vestige structure and an
absence of the external ear canal and ear drum.
Grade III microtia is the most common form of
microtia (see photo).
*Grade IV: Absence of the total ear or anotia.

18
Q

What is the tympanic membrane?

A

*The ‘ear-drum’ vibrates in response to sound.
*Middle ear bones (ossicles) are visible through the membrane.

19
Q

What are the ossicles?

A

*Smallest bones in the human body.
*Connects the tympanic membrane to the oval window of the cochlea.
Stapes - motion on the membrane, causes motions in the Malians, causes incas to lever. This pushes the stapes inwards and outwards and amplified, which contacts the oval window.

These are also filled with air.

20
Q

What is a glue ear (otitus media/OM)?

A

*Middle ear fills with fluid which impedes motion of the ossicles, so sound has to pass through fluid.
*Reduces middle ear gain, raises hearing thresholds.
*Very common in small children (<5 yrs) - can lead to development problems in terms of language development.

There are also variation in tympanic membranes like it can be present on the outer skin of lizards.

21
Q

What is the cochlea and basilar membrane?

A

Split into:
Scala vestibuli
Scala media - contains components of sound conduction.
Scala tympani

22
Q

What is the cochlea and basilar membrane?

A

*The cochlea: fluid filled spiral canal divided by a flexible membrane.
*Basilar membrane filters sound according to frequency.

23
Q

How do waves travel?

A

*Wave rises gradually, peaks, then decays
rapidly.
*Peak location depends on stimulus frequency.

24
Q

What is the organ of corti?

A

*The organ of corti sits on top of the basliar membrane, within the scala media.
*Inner and outer hair cells are mounted on it.

*Motion of the organ of corti on the basilar membrane causes displacement of the stereocilia.
*Outer hair cells contact the tectorial membrane. Inner hair cells do not.

25
Q

What is the difference between an inner and outer hair cell?

A

Outer hair cell: ‘rock and roll’ hair cell
*Outer hair cells are motile. Prestin allows the voltage based change in shape for this to occur, making the dancing motion.
*Influx of positive ions makes the outer hair cells contract

26
Q

What is the cochlear amplifier? Why do the hair cells dance in response to various sounds?

A
  • Prestin in short conformation state
  • Outer hair cell contracts
  • This pulls the basilar membrane toward the tectorial membrane.

*Amplifies by as much as 50dB!!
*Quiet sounds are amplified.
*Loud sounds are not amplified – helps us deal with 120dB of dynamic range.
*Tuning is sharper than the passive vibration of the basilar membrane.

27
Q

What is The ‘battery’ driving cochlear hair cells?

A
  • The high potassium concentration of the endolymph of the scala media creates a 2x
    amplification.
  • If it were not potassium rich then inner hair cell output (of the cochlea nerve) would be halved,
    making sound perceptually quieter.
  • And the cochlea amplification would be much smaller, again making sounds perceptually
    quieter.