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Role of Neuropilin-1/Semaphorin-3A signaling in the functional and morphological integrity of the cochlea

Neuropilin-1 (Nrp1) encodes the transmembrane cellular receptor neuropilin-1, which is associated with cardiovascular and neuronal development and was within the peak SNP interval on chromosome 8 in our prior GWAS study on age-related hearing loss (ARHL) in mice. In this study, we generated and char...

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Autores principales: Salehi, Pezhman, Ge, Marshall X., Gundimeda, Usha, Michelle Baum, Leah, Lael Cantu, Homero, Lavinsky, Joel, Tao, Litao, Myint, Anthony, Cruz, Charlene, Wang, Juemei, Nikolakopoulou, Angeliki Maria, Abdala, Carolina, Kelley, Matthew William, Ohyama, Takahiro, Coate, Thomas Matthew, Friedman, Rick A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5695633/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29059194
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007048
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author Salehi, Pezhman
Ge, Marshall X.
Gundimeda, Usha
Michelle Baum, Leah
Lael Cantu, Homero
Lavinsky, Joel
Tao, Litao
Myint, Anthony
Cruz, Charlene
Wang, Juemei
Nikolakopoulou, Angeliki Maria
Abdala, Carolina
Kelley, Matthew William
Ohyama, Takahiro
Coate, Thomas Matthew
Friedman, Rick A.
author_facet Salehi, Pezhman
Ge, Marshall X.
Gundimeda, Usha
Michelle Baum, Leah
Lael Cantu, Homero
Lavinsky, Joel
Tao, Litao
Myint, Anthony
Cruz, Charlene
Wang, Juemei
Nikolakopoulou, Angeliki Maria
Abdala, Carolina
Kelley, Matthew William
Ohyama, Takahiro
Coate, Thomas Matthew
Friedman, Rick A.
author_sort Salehi, Pezhman
collection PubMed
description Neuropilin-1 (Nrp1) encodes the transmembrane cellular receptor neuropilin-1, which is associated with cardiovascular and neuronal development and was within the peak SNP interval on chromosome 8 in our prior GWAS study on age-related hearing loss (ARHL) in mice. In this study, we generated and characterized an inner ear-specific Nrp1 conditional knockout (CKO) mouse line because Nrp1 constitutive knockouts are embryonic lethal. In situ hybridization demonstrated weak Nrp1 mRNA expression late in embryonic cochlear development, but increased expression in early postnatal stages when cochlear hair cell innervation patterns have been shown to mature. At postnatal day 5, Nrp1 CKO mice showed disorganized outer spiral bundles and enlarged microvessels of the stria vascularis (SV) but normal spiral ganglion cell (SGN) density and presynaptic ribbon body counts; however, we observed enlarged SV microvessels, reduced SGN density, and a reduction of presynaptic ribbons in the outer hair cell region of 4-month-old Nrp1 CKO mice. In addition, we demonstrated elevated hearing thresholds of the 2-month-old and 4-month-old Nrp1 CKO mice at frequencies ranging from 4 to 32kHz when compared to 2-month-old mice. These data suggest that conditional loss of Nrp1 in the inner ear leads to progressive hearing loss in mice. We also demonstrated that mice with a truncated variant of Nrp1 show cochlear axon guidance defects and that exogenous semaphorin-3A, a known neuropilin-1 receptor agonist, repels SGN axons in vitro. These data suggest that Neuropilin-1/Semaphorin-3A signaling may also serve a role in neuronal pathfinding in the developing cochlea. In summary, our results here support a model whereby Neuropilin-1/Semaphorin-3A signaling is critical for the functional and morphological integrity of the cochlea and that Nrp1 may play a role in ARHL.
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spelling pubmed-56956332017-11-30 Role of Neuropilin-1/Semaphorin-3A signaling in the functional and morphological integrity of the cochlea Salehi, Pezhman Ge, Marshall X. Gundimeda, Usha Michelle Baum, Leah Lael Cantu, Homero Lavinsky, Joel Tao, Litao Myint, Anthony Cruz, Charlene Wang, Juemei Nikolakopoulou, Angeliki Maria Abdala, Carolina Kelley, Matthew William Ohyama, Takahiro Coate, Thomas Matthew Friedman, Rick A. PLoS Genet Research Article Neuropilin-1 (Nrp1) encodes the transmembrane cellular receptor neuropilin-1, which is associated with cardiovascular and neuronal development and was within the peak SNP interval on chromosome 8 in our prior GWAS study on age-related hearing loss (ARHL) in mice. In this study, we generated and characterized an inner ear-specific Nrp1 conditional knockout (CKO) mouse line because Nrp1 constitutive knockouts are embryonic lethal. In situ hybridization demonstrated weak Nrp1 mRNA expression late in embryonic cochlear development, but increased expression in early postnatal stages when cochlear hair cell innervation patterns have been shown to mature. At postnatal day 5, Nrp1 CKO mice showed disorganized outer spiral bundles and enlarged microvessels of the stria vascularis (SV) but normal spiral ganglion cell (SGN) density and presynaptic ribbon body counts; however, we observed enlarged SV microvessels, reduced SGN density, and a reduction of presynaptic ribbons in the outer hair cell region of 4-month-old Nrp1 CKO mice. In addition, we demonstrated elevated hearing thresholds of the 2-month-old and 4-month-old Nrp1 CKO mice at frequencies ranging from 4 to 32kHz when compared to 2-month-old mice. These data suggest that conditional loss of Nrp1 in the inner ear leads to progressive hearing loss in mice. We also demonstrated that mice with a truncated variant of Nrp1 show cochlear axon guidance defects and that exogenous semaphorin-3A, a known neuropilin-1 receptor agonist, repels SGN axons in vitro. These data suggest that Neuropilin-1/Semaphorin-3A signaling may also serve a role in neuronal pathfinding in the developing cochlea. In summary, our results here support a model whereby Neuropilin-1/Semaphorin-3A signaling is critical for the functional and morphological integrity of the cochlea and that Nrp1 may play a role in ARHL. Public Library of Science 2017-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC5695633/ /pubmed/29059194 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007048 Text en © 2017 Salehi 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Salehi, Pezhman
Ge, Marshall X.
Gundimeda, Usha
Michelle Baum, Leah
Lael Cantu, Homero
Lavinsky, Joel
Tao, Litao
Myint, Anthony
Cruz, Charlene
Wang, Juemei
Nikolakopoulou, Angeliki Maria
Abdala, Carolina
Kelley, Matthew William
Ohyama, Takahiro
Coate, Thomas Matthew
Friedman, Rick A.
Role of Neuropilin-1/Semaphorin-3A signaling in the functional and morphological integrity of the cochlea
title Role of Neuropilin-1/Semaphorin-3A signaling in the functional and morphological integrity of the cochlea
title_full Role of Neuropilin-1/Semaphorin-3A signaling in the functional and morphological integrity of the cochlea
title_fullStr Role of Neuropilin-1/Semaphorin-3A signaling in the functional and morphological integrity of the cochlea
title_full_unstemmed Role of Neuropilin-1/Semaphorin-3A signaling in the functional and morphological integrity of the cochlea
title_short Role of Neuropilin-1/Semaphorin-3A signaling in the functional and morphological integrity of the cochlea
title_sort role of neuropilin-1/semaphorin-3a signaling in the functional and morphological integrity of the cochlea
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5695633/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29059194
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007048
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