Christopher Kirk E, Smith David W
Department of Biological Anthropology and Anatomy, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
J Assoc Res Otolaryngol. 2003 Dec;4(4):445-65. doi: 10.1007/s10162-002-3013-y. Epub 2003 Jun 6.
The medial olivocochlear (MOC) efferent system is an important component of an active mechanical outer hair cell system in mammals. An extensive neurophysiological literature demonstrates that the MOC system attenuates the response of the cochlea to sound by reducing the gain of the outer hair cell mechanical response to stimulation. Despite a growing understanding of MOC physiology, the biological role of the MOC system in mammalian audition remains uncertain. Some evidence suggests that the MOC system functions in a protective role by acting to reduce receptor damage during intense acoustic exposure. For the MOC system to have evolved as a protective mechanism, however, the inner ears of mammals must be exposed to potentially damaging sources of noise that can elicit MOC-mediated protective effects under natural conditions. In this review, we evaluate the possibility that the MOC system evolved to protect the inner ear from naturally occurring environmental noise. Our survey of nonanthropogenic noise levels shows that while sustained sources of broadband noise are found in nearly all natural acoustic environments, frequency-averaged ambient noise levels in these environments rarely exceed 70 dB SPL. Similarly, sources reporting ambient noise spectra in natural acoustic environments suggest that noise levels within narrow frequency bands are typically low in intensity (<40 dB SPL). Only in rare instances (e.g., during frog choruses) are ambient noise levels sustained at moderately high intensities (~70-90 dB SPL). By contrast, all experiments in which an MOC-mediated protective effect was demonstrated used much higher sound intensities to traumatize the cochlea (100-150 dB SPL). This substantial difference between natural ambient noise levels and the experimental conditions necessary to evoke MOC-mediated protection suggests that even the noisiest natural acoustic environments are not sufficiently intense to have selected for the evolution of the MOC system as a protective mechanism. Furthermore, although relatively intense noise environments do exist in nature, they are insufficiently distributed to account for the widespread distribution of the MOC system in mammals. The paucity of high-intensity noise and the near ubiquity of low-level noise in natural environments supports the hypothesis that the MOC system evolved as a mechanism for "unmasking" biologically significant acoustic stimuli by reducing the response of the cochlea to simultaneous low-level noise. This suggested role enjoys widespread experimental support.
内侧橄榄耳蜗(MOC)传出系统是哺乳动物主动机械性外毛细胞系统的重要组成部分。大量神经生理学文献表明,MOC系统通过降低外毛细胞对刺激的机械反应增益来减弱耳蜗对声音的反应。尽管对MOC生理学的理解不断加深,但MOC系统在哺乳动物听觉中的生物学作用仍不明确。一些证据表明,MOC系统通过在强烈声暴露期间减少感受器损伤而发挥保护作用。然而,要使MOC系统作为一种保护机制进化,哺乳动物的内耳必须暴露于潜在的有害噪声源,这些噪声源在自然条件下能够引发MOC介导的保护作用。在这篇综述中,我们评估了MOC系统进化以保护内耳免受自然环境噪声影响的可能性。我们对非人为噪声水平的调查表明,虽然几乎在所有自然声学环境中都能找到持续的宽带噪声源,但这些环境中的频率平均环境噪声水平很少超过70 dB SPL。同样,报告自然声学环境中环境噪声频谱的资料表明,窄频带内的噪声水平强度通常较低(<40 dB SPL)。只有在极少数情况下(例如,在青蛙合唱期间),环境噪声水平才会持续保持在中等高强度(~70 - 90 dB SPL)。相比之下,所有证明MOC介导的保护作用的实验都使用了高得多的声音强度来损伤耳蜗(100 - 150 dB SPL)。自然环境噪声水平与引发MOC介导保护所需的实验条件之间的这种显著差异表明,即使是最嘈杂的自然声学环境也不够强烈,不足以促使MOC系统作为一种保护机制进化。此外,尽管自然界中确实存在相对强烈的噪声环境,但它们分布不足,无法解释MOC系统在哺乳动物中的广泛分布。自然环境中高强度噪声的匮乏和低水平噪声的几乎无处不在支持了这样一种假设,即MOC系统进化为一种通过降低耳蜗对同时存在的低水平噪声的反应来“揭示”具有生物学意义的声学刺激的机制。这一提出的作用得到了广泛的实验支持。