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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Hair cell ; Regeneration ; Avian ; Progenitor cells ; Basilar papilla
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Hair cells are sensory cells that transduce motion into neural signals. In the cochlea, they are used to detect sound waves in the environment and turn them into auditory signals that can be processed in the brain. Hair cells in the cochlea of birds and mammals were thought to be produced only during embryogenesis and, once made, they were expected to last throughout the lifetime of the animal. Thus, any loss of hair cells due to trauma or disease was thought to lead to permanent impairment of auditory function. Recently, however, studies from a number of laboratories have shown that hair cells in the avian cochlea can be regenerated after acoustic trauma or ototoxic drug damage. This regeneration is accompanied by a repair of the sensory organ and associated tissues and results in a recovery of auditory function. In this review, we examine and compare the structural events that lead to hair cell loss after noise damage and ototoxic drug damage as well as the processes involved in the recovery of the epithelium and the regeneration of the hair cells. Moreover, we examine functional recovery and how it relates to the structural recovery. Finally, we investigate the evidence for the hypothesis that supporting cells in the basilar papilla act as the progenitor cells for the regenerated hair cells and examine the cellular events required to stimulate the progenitor cells to leave the quiescent state, re-enter the cell cycle, and divide.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Chichester : Wiley-Blackwell
    Organic Magnetic Resonance 25 (1987), S. 176-178 
    ISSN: 0749-1581
    Keywords: INADEQUATE ; 2D NMR ; Carbon-carbon scalar coupling ; Polarization transfer ; Quaternary carbons ; Chemistry ; Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The two-dimensional INEPT-INADEQUATE experiment gives correlation peaks for unprotonated carbons which show only half of the total available signal, because the enhanced 13C signal generated by polarization transfer is shared equally between protonated and unprotonated coupling partners by the double quantum filtration step. If precautions are taken to attenuate unwanted signals from protonated carbons, then the double quantum filtration step may be dispensed with, leaving a hydrogen-carbon-carbon relay sequence. This gives unidirectional coherence transfer, ensuring that the maximum possible signal is concentrated in a single cross-peak identifying the correlation between protonated and unprotonated carbons. By extending the basic HCC relay sequence to include an evolution period an enhanced 13C-13C COSY 2D spectrum may be produced, with the further advantage over the 2D INADEQUATE experiment that the range of 13C-13C coupling constants detectable is limited only by the available resolution.
    Additional Material: 3 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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