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In Vivo Analysis of Lrig Genes Reveals Redundant and Independent Functions in the Inner Ear

Lrig proteins are conserved transmembrane proteins that modulate a variety of signaling pathways from worm to humans. In mammals, there are three family members – Lrig1, Lrig2, and Lrig3 – that are defined by closely related extracellular domains with a similar arrangement of leucine rich repeats an...

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Autores principales: del Rio, Tony, Nishitani, Allison M., Yu, Wei-Ming, Goodrich, Lisa V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3784559/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24086156
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1003824
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author del Rio, Tony
Nishitani, Allison M.
Yu, Wei-Ming
Goodrich, Lisa V.
author_facet del Rio, Tony
Nishitani, Allison M.
Yu, Wei-Ming
Goodrich, Lisa V.
author_sort del Rio, Tony
collection PubMed
description Lrig proteins are conserved transmembrane proteins that modulate a variety of signaling pathways from worm to humans. In mammals, there are three family members – Lrig1, Lrig2, and Lrig3 – that are defined by closely related extracellular domains with a similar arrangement of leucine rich repeats and immunoglobulin domains. However, the intracellular domains show little homology. Lrig1 inhibits EGF signaling through internalization and degradation of ErbB receptors. Although Lrig3 can also bind ErbB receptors in vitro, it is unclear whether Lrig2 and Lrig3 exhibit similar functions to Lrig1. To gain insights into Lrig gene functions in vivo, we compared the expression and function of the Lrigs in the inner ear, which offers a sensitive system for detecting effects on morphogenesis and function. We find that all three family members are expressed in the inner ear throughout development, with Lrig1 and Lrig3 restricted to subsets of cells and Lrig2 expressed more broadly. Lrig1 and Lrig3 overlap prominently in the developing vestibular apparatus and simultaneous removal of both genes disrupts inner ear morphogenesis. This suggests that these two family members act redundantly in the otic epithelium. In contrast, although Lrig1 and Lrig2 are frequently co-expressed, Lrig1(−/−);Lrig2(−/−) double mutant ears show no enhanced structural abnormalities. At later stages, Lrig1 expression is sustained in non-sensory tissues, whereas Lrig2 levels are enhanced in neurons and sensory epithelia. Consistent with these distinct expression patterns, Lrig1 and Lrig2 mutant mice exhibit different forms of impaired auditory responsiveness. Notably, Lrig1(−/−);Lrig2(−/−) double mutant mice display vestibular deficits and suffer from a more severe auditory defect that is accompanied by a cochlear innervation phenotype not present in single mutants. Thus, Lrig genes appear to act both redundantly and independently, with Lrig2 emerging as the most functionally distinct family member.
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spelling pubmed-37845592013-10-01 In Vivo Analysis of Lrig Genes Reveals Redundant and Independent Functions in the Inner Ear del Rio, Tony Nishitani, Allison M. Yu, Wei-Ming Goodrich, Lisa V. PLoS Genet Research Article Lrig proteins are conserved transmembrane proteins that modulate a variety of signaling pathways from worm to humans. In mammals, there are three family members – Lrig1, Lrig2, and Lrig3 – that are defined by closely related extracellular domains with a similar arrangement of leucine rich repeats and immunoglobulin domains. However, the intracellular domains show little homology. Lrig1 inhibits EGF signaling through internalization and degradation of ErbB receptors. Although Lrig3 can also bind ErbB receptors in vitro, it is unclear whether Lrig2 and Lrig3 exhibit similar functions to Lrig1. To gain insights into Lrig gene functions in vivo, we compared the expression and function of the Lrigs in the inner ear, which offers a sensitive system for detecting effects on morphogenesis and function. We find that all three family members are expressed in the inner ear throughout development, with Lrig1 and Lrig3 restricted to subsets of cells and Lrig2 expressed more broadly. Lrig1 and Lrig3 overlap prominently in the developing vestibular apparatus and simultaneous removal of both genes disrupts inner ear morphogenesis. This suggests that these two family members act redundantly in the otic epithelium. In contrast, although Lrig1 and Lrig2 are frequently co-expressed, Lrig1(−/−);Lrig2(−/−) double mutant ears show no enhanced structural abnormalities. At later stages, Lrig1 expression is sustained in non-sensory tissues, whereas Lrig2 levels are enhanced in neurons and sensory epithelia. Consistent with these distinct expression patterns, Lrig1 and Lrig2 mutant mice exhibit different forms of impaired auditory responsiveness. Notably, Lrig1(−/−);Lrig2(−/−) double mutant mice display vestibular deficits and suffer from a more severe auditory defect that is accompanied by a cochlear innervation phenotype not present in single mutants. Thus, Lrig genes appear to act both redundantly and independently, with Lrig2 emerging as the most functionally distinct family member. Public Library of Science 2013-09-26 /pmc/articles/PMC3784559/ /pubmed/24086156 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1003824 Text en © 2013 del Rio et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
del Rio, Tony
Nishitani, Allison M.
Yu, Wei-Ming
Goodrich, Lisa V.
In Vivo Analysis of Lrig Genes Reveals Redundant and Independent Functions in the Inner Ear
title In Vivo Analysis of Lrig Genes Reveals Redundant and Independent Functions in the Inner Ear
title_full In Vivo Analysis of Lrig Genes Reveals Redundant and Independent Functions in the Inner Ear
title_fullStr In Vivo Analysis of Lrig Genes Reveals Redundant and Independent Functions in the Inner Ear
title_full_unstemmed In Vivo Analysis of Lrig Genes Reveals Redundant and Independent Functions in the Inner Ear
title_short In Vivo Analysis of Lrig Genes Reveals Redundant and Independent Functions in the Inner Ear
title_sort in vivo analysis of lrig genes reveals redundant and independent functions in the inner ear
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3784559/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24086156
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1003824
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