𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Proliferation of vertebrate inner ear supporting cells

✍ Scribed by Wilkins, Heather R. ;Presson, Joelle C. ;Popper, Arthur N.


Book ID
101260157
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
168 KB
Volume
39
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-3034

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✦ Synopsis


Using two S phase markers, we determined the cell-cycle behavior of inner ear supporting cells from two species, the chicken and the oscar. The results indicate that chicken utricular supporting cells divide once and do not return to the cell cycle for at least 7 days. In contrast, supporting cell progeny in the oscar saccule return to S phase after 5 days. While both the chicken utricle and oscar saccule show ongoing supporting cell proliferation, these data indicate that there may be a dedicated recycling population of supporting cells in the oscar saccule but not in the chicken utricle that is responsible for hair cell production. An expulsion of proliferative cell progeny in the chicken utricle after 7 days may be a driving force for proliferation, as well as an explanation for why hair cell numbers do not increase in the chicken utricle with age. This was not seen in the oscar saccule, possibly explaining how this end organ increases in size throughout the adult life of the animal. The absence of S phase cell expulsion, however, does not rule out the role of cell death in the oscar saccule.


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## Abstract Inner ear efferent neurons are part of a descending centrifugal pathway from the hindbrain known across vertebrates as the octavolateralis efferent system. This centrifugal pathway terminates on either sensory hair cells or eighth nerve ganglion cells. Most studies of efferent developme