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Mechanical network equivalence between the katydid and mammalian inner ears

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posted on 2025-03-05, 11:14 authored by Emine Celiker, Charlie Woodrow, Oscar Guadayol roig, Leonidas-Romanos Davranoglou, Christian M. Schlepütz, Beth Mortimer, Graham K. Taylor, Stuart HumphriesStuart Humphries, Fernando Montealegre-ZFernando Montealegre-Z

Mammalian hearing operates on three basic steps: 1) sound capturing, 2) impedance conversion, and 3) frequency analysis. While these canonical steps are vital for acoustic

communication and survival in mammals, they are not unique to them. An equivalent mechanism has been described for katydids (Insecta), and it is unique to this group among invertebrates. The katydid inner ear resembles an uncoiled cochlea, and has a length less than 1 mm. Their inner ears contain a hearing organ, crista acustica, which holds tonotopically arranged sensory cells for frequency mapping via travelling waves. The crista acustica is located on a curved triangular surface formed by the dorsal wall of the ear canal. While empirical recordings show tonotopic vibrations in the katydid inner ear for frequency analysis, the biophysical mechanism leading to tonotopy remains

elusive due to the small size and complexity of the hearing organ. In this study, robust numerical simulations are developed for an in silico investigation of this process.

Simulations are based on the precise katydid inner ear geometry obtained by synchrotron-based micro-computed tomography, and empirically determined inner ear

fluid properties for an accurate representation of the underlying mechanism. We demonstrate that the triangular structure below the hearing organ drives the tonotopy

and travelling waves in the inner ear, and thus has an equivalent role to the mammalian basilar membrane. This reveals a stronger analogy between the inner ear basic

mechanical networks of two organisms with ancient evolutionary differences and independent phylogenetic histories.

Funding

The Insect cochlea: a non-invasive path towards enhanced sound detectors

European Research Council

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MULTIDISCIPLINARY APPROACH TO BIOACOUSTICS: Integrating phylogenomics, biophysics, and functional genomics to unravel the evolution of hearing and sin

Natural Environment Research Council

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History

School affiliated with

  • College of Health and Science (Research Outputs)
  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)
  • School of Natural Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

PLoS Computational Biology

Volume

20

Issue

12

Pages/Article Number

e1012641

Publisher

Public Library of Science

ISSN

1553-734X

eISSN

1553-7358

Date Submitted

2024-06-11

Date Accepted

2024-11-14

Date of First Publication

2024-12-13

Date of Final Publication

2024-12-13

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  • SDG 15 - Life on Land
  • SDG 4 - Quality Education

Open Access Status

  • Open Access

Date Document First Uploaded

2024-12-13

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