Tight and gap junctions in a vertebrate inner ear
- PMID: 983970
- DOI: 10.1002/aja.1001470304
Tight and gap junctions in a vertebrate inner ear
Abstract
The auditory organ of the alligator lizard has been investigated with the transmission electron microscope using methods which distinguish between tight and gap junctions. There is a continuous zone of tight junctions located near the endolymphatic surface of the organ forming a boundary between the endolymph in scala media and the interstitial spaces between the cells. No such tight junctions were observed between the perilymph of scala tympani and the interstitial fluid within the organ. Small gap junctions occur between hair cells and supporting cells and large gap junctions occur between adjacent supporting cells. The locations of the tight junctions suggest that the composition of the intercellular fluid in the receptor organ is probably more like perilymph than like endolymph. The presence of gap junctions between hair cells and supporting cells provides a possible morphological basis for the occurrence of intracellular responses to sound in supporting cells, and for elctric coupling of receptor cells.
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