Forces between clustered stereocilia minimize friction in the ear on a subnanometre scale
Andrei S. Kozlov, Johannes Baumgart, Thomas Risler, Corstiaen P. C., Versteegh, A. J. Hudspeth

TL;DR
This study reveals how the physical arrangement and structural features of stereocilia in ear hair bundles minimize viscous friction, enhancing sound detection sensitivity through fluid-structure interactions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that stereocilia clustering and specific structural links reduce hydrodynamic forces, improving mechanotransduction efficiency in the ear.
Findings
Close apposition of stereocilia immobilizes interstitial fluid, reducing drag.
Tip links couple channels to minimize dissipative motion.
Structural stabilization further decreases hydrodynamic resistance.
Abstract
The detection of sound begins when energy derived from acoustic stimuli deflects the hair bundles atop hair cells. As hair bundles move, the viscous friction between stereocilia and the surrounding liquid poses a fundamental challenge to the ear's high sensitivity and sharp frequency selectivity. Part of the solution to this problem lies in the active process that uses energy for frequency-selective sound amplification. Here we demonstrate that a complementary part involves the fluid-structure interaction between the liquid within the hair bundle and the stereocilia. Using force measurement on a dynamically scaled model, finite-element analysis, analytical estimation of hydrodynamic forces, stochastic simulation and high-resolution interferometric measurement of hair bundles, we characterize the origin and magnitude of the forces between individual stereocilia during small hair-bundle…
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