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Slc26a7 Chloride Channel Activity and Localization in Mouse Reissner’s Membrane Epithelium

Several members of the SLC26 gene family have highly-restricted expression patterns in the auditory and vestibular periphery and mutations in mice of at least two of these (SLC26A4 and SLC26A5) lead to deficits in hearing and/or balance. A previous report pointed to SLC26A7 as a candidate gene impor...

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Autores principales: Kim, Kyunghee X., Sanneman, Joel D., Kim, Hyoung-Mi, Harbidge, Donald G., Xu, Jie, Soleimani, Manoocher, Wangemann, Philine, Marcus, Daniel C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4014619/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24810589
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097191
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author Kim, Kyunghee X.
Sanneman, Joel D.
Kim, Hyoung-Mi
Harbidge, Donald G.
Xu, Jie
Soleimani, Manoocher
Wangemann, Philine
Marcus, Daniel C.
author_facet Kim, Kyunghee X.
Sanneman, Joel D.
Kim, Hyoung-Mi
Harbidge, Donald G.
Xu, Jie
Soleimani, Manoocher
Wangemann, Philine
Marcus, Daniel C.
author_sort Kim, Kyunghee X.
collection PubMed
description Several members of the SLC26 gene family have highly-restricted expression patterns in the auditory and vestibular periphery and mutations in mice of at least two of these (SLC26A4 and SLC26A5) lead to deficits in hearing and/or balance. A previous report pointed to SLC26A7 as a candidate gene important for cochlear function. In the present study, inner ears were assayed by immunostaining for Slc26a7 in neonatal and adult mice. Slc26a7 was detected in the basolateral membrane of Reissner’s membrane epithelial cells but not neighboring cells, with an onset of expression at P5; gene knockout resulted in the absence of protein expression in Reissner’s membrane. Whole-cell patch clamp recordings revealed anion currents and conductances that were elevated for NO(3) (−) over Cl(−) and inhibited by I(−) and NPPB. Elevated NO(3) (−) currents were absent in Slc26a7 knockout mice. There were, however, no major changes to hearing (auditory brainstem response) of knockout mice during early adult life under constitutive and noise exposure conditions. The lack of Slc26a7 protein expression found in the wild-type vestibular labyrinth was consistent with the observation of normal balance. We conclude that SLC26A7 participates in Cl(−) transport in Reissner’s membrane epithelial cells, but that either other anion pathways, such as ClC-2, possibly substitute satisfactorily under the conditions tested or that Cl(−) conductance in these cells is not critical to cochlear function. The involvement of SLC26A7 in cellular pH regulation in other epithelial cells leaves open the possibility that SLC26A7 is needed in Reissner’s membrane cells during local perturbations of pH.
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spelling pubmed-40146192014-05-14 Slc26a7 Chloride Channel Activity and Localization in Mouse Reissner’s Membrane Epithelium Kim, Kyunghee X. Sanneman, Joel D. Kim, Hyoung-Mi Harbidge, Donald G. Xu, Jie Soleimani, Manoocher Wangemann, Philine Marcus, Daniel C. PLoS One Research Article Several members of the SLC26 gene family have highly-restricted expression patterns in the auditory and vestibular periphery and mutations in mice of at least two of these (SLC26A4 and SLC26A5) lead to deficits in hearing and/or balance. A previous report pointed to SLC26A7 as a candidate gene important for cochlear function. In the present study, inner ears were assayed by immunostaining for Slc26a7 in neonatal and adult mice. Slc26a7 was detected in the basolateral membrane of Reissner’s membrane epithelial cells but not neighboring cells, with an onset of expression at P5; gene knockout resulted in the absence of protein expression in Reissner’s membrane. Whole-cell patch clamp recordings revealed anion currents and conductances that were elevated for NO(3) (−) over Cl(−) and inhibited by I(−) and NPPB. Elevated NO(3) (−) currents were absent in Slc26a7 knockout mice. There were, however, no major changes to hearing (auditory brainstem response) of knockout mice during early adult life under constitutive and noise exposure conditions. The lack of Slc26a7 protein expression found in the wild-type vestibular labyrinth was consistent with the observation of normal balance. We conclude that SLC26A7 participates in Cl(−) transport in Reissner’s membrane epithelial cells, but that either other anion pathways, such as ClC-2, possibly substitute satisfactorily under the conditions tested or that Cl(−) conductance in these cells is not critical to cochlear function. The involvement of SLC26A7 in cellular pH regulation in other epithelial cells leaves open the possibility that SLC26A7 is needed in Reissner’s membrane cells during local perturbations of pH. Public Library of Science 2014-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4014619/ /pubmed/24810589 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097191 Text en © 2014 Kim 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
Kim, Kyunghee X.
Sanneman, Joel D.
Kim, Hyoung-Mi
Harbidge, Donald G.
Xu, Jie
Soleimani, Manoocher
Wangemann, Philine
Marcus, Daniel C.
Slc26a7 Chloride Channel Activity and Localization in Mouse Reissner’s Membrane Epithelium
title Slc26a7 Chloride Channel Activity and Localization in Mouse Reissner’s Membrane Epithelium
title_full Slc26a7 Chloride Channel Activity and Localization in Mouse Reissner’s Membrane Epithelium
title_fullStr Slc26a7 Chloride Channel Activity and Localization in Mouse Reissner’s Membrane Epithelium
title_full_unstemmed Slc26a7 Chloride Channel Activity and Localization in Mouse Reissner’s Membrane Epithelium
title_short Slc26a7 Chloride Channel Activity and Localization in Mouse Reissner’s Membrane Epithelium
title_sort slc26a7 chloride channel activity and localization in mouse reissner’s membrane epithelium
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4014619/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24810589
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097191
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