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  • Title: High resolution scanning electron microscopy of stereocilia in the cochlea of normal, postmortem, and drug-treated guinea pigs.
    Author: Osborne MP, Comis SD.
    Journal: J Electron Microsc Tech; 1990 Jul; 15(3):245-60. PubMed ID: 2374035.
    Abstract:
    The morphology of hair bundles has been studied by high resolution scanning electron microscopy using a variety of fixatives, including glutaraldehyde, glutaraldehyde-picrate, glutaraldehyde-tannic acid, glutaraldehyde followed by post-fixation in osmium tetroxide, and the osmium thiocarbohydrazide technique. Critical evaluation of several metal coatings, gold, gold-palladium, and platinum has been carried out. Both the surface texture of stereocilia and their cross-links are sensitive to fixation and metal coating. We are of the opinion that glutaraldehyde gives the best general quality of fixation and preservation for all types of cross-links. We have described three major sets of cross-links: first, lateral links connecting stereocilia within the same row; second, lateral links connecting stereocilia of adjacent rows; and third, upward-pointing links, one per stereocilium, connecting the tip of each shorter stereocilium to the lateral surface of the adjacent taller stereocilium. Current physiological and anatomical evidence suggests that the lateral links couple the individual stereocilia within the hair bundle so that they function as a single mechanical unit. The upward-pointing tip links are ideally placed to respond to mechanical deformation of the hair bundle, being stretched when the stereocilia are deflected in the excitatory direction towards the tallest row and relaxed when deflected in the opposite, inhibitory direction. Postmortem morphological changes are detected within 15 minutes of cardiac arrest and become progressively more pronounced in time. These results enabled us to distinguish specific drug-induced changes which could not be attributed simply to cell death. Effects of cisplatin and kanamycin upon hair bundles are described. The work reported here is based on studies using the guinea pig cochlea. Some of the postmortem changes described have also been confirmed in human cochleas. It is stressed that many of the postmortem and drug-induced effects can only reliably be studied by high resolution scanning electron microscopy coupled with appropriate preparation procedures.
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