The striated organelle (SO), a cytoskeletal structure located in the apical region of cochlear and vestibular hair cells, consists of alternating, cross-linked, thick and thin filamentous bundles. In the vestibular periphery, the SO is well developed in both type I and type II hair cells. We studied the 3D structure of the SO with intermediate-voltage electron microscopy and electron microscope tomography. We also used antibodies to α-2 spectrin, one protein component, to trace development of the SO in vestibular hair cells over the first postnatal week. In type I cells, the SO forms an inverted open-ended cone attached to the cell membrane along both its upper and lower circumferences and separated from the cuticular plate by a dense cluster of exceptionally large mitochondria. In addition to contacts with the membrane and adjacent mitochondria, the SO is connected both directly and indirectly, via microtubules, to some stereociliary rootlets. The overall architecture of the apical region in type I hair cells-a striated structure restricting a cluster of large mitochondria between its filaments, the cuticular plate, and plasma membrane-suggests that the SO might serve two functions: to maintain hair-cell shape and to alter transduction by changing the geometry and mechanical properties of hair bundles.actin | cytoskeleton | stereocilia | ultrastructure | sensory receptors H air-cell stereocilia are important for mechanotransduction. Much is known about their structure, their mechanical properties, and their geometric arrangement (1-3). These cells are embedded in the cuticular plate, a dense structure composed of an actin gel (4) located at the apical end of the hair cell, which is thought to act as a rigid platform, helping stereocilia return to their resting positions after stimulus-evoked displacements (5, 6). What has never been investigated is how the cuticular plate might be stabilized by structures underneath it. Do these structures provide a foundation for the cuticular plate and the hair bundle?One such structure is the striated organelle (SO), also known as a laminated (or Friedman's) body, which is a cytoskeletal lattice underlying the apicolateral hair-cell membrane and consisting of alternating thick and thin filament bundles. When first described in vestibular hair cells in the 1960s, this structure was thought to be a pathological feature (7,8). It was later found to be a normal component of mammalian vestibular and cochlear inner, but not outer, hair cells (9-11). A striated structure, similar in position but differing in morphological details, has been described in other vertebrates (12)(13)(14).Slepecky et al. provided a description of the SO (10, 15, 16), including the periodicity of its filaments, their radial direction, attachment to the plasma membrane, and association with microtubules. Previous studies, even those based on conventional transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and deep-etch freeze fracture (9,10,15,17,18), did not provide a picture of the 3D structure of the organelle. Elec...