No Correlates for Somatic Motility in Freeze-Fractured Hair-Cell Membranes of Lizards and Birds
Abstract
It is not known whether active processes in mammals and non-mammals are due to the same underlying mechanism. To address this, we studied the size and density of particles in hair-cell membranes in mammals, in a lizard, the Tokay gecko, and in a bird, the barn owl. We surmised that if the prominent particles described in mammalian outer-hair-cell membranes are responsible for cochlear motility, a similar occurrence in non-mammalian hair cells would argue for similar mechanisms. Particle densities differed, however, substantially from those of mammals, suggesting that non-mammals have no membrane-based motility.
- Publication:
-
Biophysics of the Cochlea. From Molecules to Models
- Pub Date:
- February 2003
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2003bcmm.conf..185K