INVESTIGADORES
ELGOYHEN Ana Belen
artículos
Título:
The evolutionary tuning of hearing
Autor/es:
LIPOVSEK M; ELGOYHEN AB
Revista:
Trends in Neurosciences
Editorial:
Elsevier Ltd
Referencias:
Año: 2023 vol. 46 p. 110 - 123
Resumen:
After the transition to life on land, tympanic middle ears emerged separately in different groups of tetrapods, facilitating the efficient detection of airborne sounds and paving the way for high frequency sensitivity. The processes that brought about high-frequency hearing in mammals are tightly linked to the accumulation of coding sequence changes in inner ear genes; many of which were selected during evolution. These include proteins involved in hair bundle morphology, mechanotransduction and high endolymphatic potential, somatic electromotility for sound amplification, ribbon synapses for high-fidelity transmission of sound stimuli, and efferent synapses for the modulation of sound amplification. Here, we review the molecular evolutionary processes behind auditory functional innovation. Overall, the evidence to date supports the hypothesis that changes in inner ear proteins were central to the fine tuning of mammalian hearing.