RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 A Chimera Analysis of Prestin Knock-Out Mice JF The Journal of Neuroscience JO J. Neurosci. FD Society for Neuroscience SP 12000 OP 12008 DO 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1651-09.2009 VO 29 IS 38 A1 Mary Ann Cheatham A1 Sharon Low-Zeddies A1 Khurram Naik A1 Roxanne Edge A1 Jing Zheng A1 Charles T. Anderson A1 Peter Dallos YR 2009 UL http://www.jneurosci.org/content/29/38/12000.abstract AB A chimera is a genetic composite containing a unique mix of cells derived from more than one zygote. This mouse model allows one to learn how cells of contrasting genotype functionally interact in vivo. Here, we investigate the effect that different proportions of prestin-containing outer hair cells (OHC) have on cochlear amplification. To address this issue, we developed a prestin chimeric mouse in which both ROSA26 wild-type (WT) and prestin knock-out (KO) genotypes are present in a single cochlea. The WT ROSA26 mice express a cell marker, allowing one to identify cells originating from the WT genome. Examination of cochlear tissue indicated that prestin chimeric mice demonstrate a mosaic in which mutant and normal OHCs interleave along the cochlear partition, similar to all other chimeric mouse models. The anatomical distribution of prestin-containing OHCs was compared with physiological data including thresholds and tuning curves for the compound action potential (CAP) recorded in anesthetized mice. Analysis of these measures did not reveal mixed phenotypes in which the distribution of prestin-containing OHCs impacted sensitivity and frequency selectivity to different degrees. However, by reducing the number of prestin-containing OHCs, phenotypes intermediate between WT and KO response patterns were obtained. Accordingly, we demonstrate a proportional reduction in sensitivity and in the tip length of CAP tuning curves as the number of OHCs derived from the KO genome increases; i.e., genotype ratio and phenotype are closely related.