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Trans-differentiation of outer hair cells into inner hair cells in the absence of INSM1

The mammalian cochlea contains two types of mechanosensory hair cells (HCs) that play different and critical roles in hearing. Inner hair cells (IHCs), with an elaborate presynaptic apparatus, signal to cochlear neurons and communicate sound information to the brain. Outer hair cells (OHCs) mechanic...

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Autores principales: Wiwatpanit, Teerawat, Lorenzen, Sarah M., Cantú, Jorge A., Foo, Chuan Zhi, Hogan, Ann K., Márquez, Freddie, Clancy, John C., Schipma, Matthew J., Cheatham, Mary Ann, Duggan, Anne, García-Añoveros, Jaime
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6279423/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30305733
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0570-8
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author Wiwatpanit, Teerawat
Lorenzen, Sarah M.
Cantú, Jorge A.
Foo, Chuan Zhi
Hogan, Ann K.
Márquez, Freddie
Clancy, John C.
Schipma, Matthew J.
Cheatham, Mary Ann
Duggan, Anne
García-Añoveros, Jaime
author_facet Wiwatpanit, Teerawat
Lorenzen, Sarah M.
Cantú, Jorge A.
Foo, Chuan Zhi
Hogan, Ann K.
Márquez, Freddie
Clancy, John C.
Schipma, Matthew J.
Cheatham, Mary Ann
Duggan, Anne
García-Añoveros, Jaime
author_sort Wiwatpanit, Teerawat
collection PubMed
description The mammalian cochlea contains two types of mechanosensory hair cells (HCs) that play different and critical roles in hearing. Inner hair cells (IHCs), with an elaborate presynaptic apparatus, signal to cochlear neurons and communicate sound information to the brain. Outer hair cells (OHCs) mechanically amplify sound-induced vibrations, enabling enhanced sensitivity to sound and sharp tuning. Cochlear HCs are solely generated during development and their death, most often of OHCs, is the main cause of deafness. OHCs and IHCs, together with supporting cells, originate embryonically from the prosensory region of the otocyst, but how HCs differentiate into two different types is unknown(1–3). Here we show that Insm1, which encodes a zinc finger protein transiently expressed in nascent OHCs, consolidates their fate by preventing trans-differentiation into IHCs. In the absence of INSM1 many HCs born embryonically as OHCs switch fates to become mature IHCs. In order to identify the genetic mechanisms by which Insm1 operates, we compared transcriptomes of immature IHCs vs OHCs, as well as OHCs with and without INSM1. OHCs lacking INSM1 upregulate a set of genes, most of which are normally preferentially expressed by IHCs. The homeotic cell transformation of OHCs without INSM1 into IHCs reveals for the first time a mechanism by which these neighboring mechanosensory cells begin to differ: INSM1 represses a core set of early IHC-enriched genes in embryonic OHCs and makes them unresponsive to an IHC-inducing gradient, so that they proceed to mature as OHCs. Without INSM1, some of the OHCs upregulating these few IHC-enriched transcripts trans-differentiate into IHCs, revealing the first candidate genes for IHC-specific differentiation.
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spelling pubmed-62794232019-04-10 Trans-differentiation of outer hair cells into inner hair cells in the absence of INSM1 Wiwatpanit, Teerawat Lorenzen, Sarah M. Cantú, Jorge A. Foo, Chuan Zhi Hogan, Ann K. Márquez, Freddie Clancy, John C. Schipma, Matthew J. Cheatham, Mary Ann Duggan, Anne García-Añoveros, Jaime Nature Article The mammalian cochlea contains two types of mechanosensory hair cells (HCs) that play different and critical roles in hearing. Inner hair cells (IHCs), with an elaborate presynaptic apparatus, signal to cochlear neurons and communicate sound information to the brain. Outer hair cells (OHCs) mechanically amplify sound-induced vibrations, enabling enhanced sensitivity to sound and sharp tuning. Cochlear HCs are solely generated during development and their death, most often of OHCs, is the main cause of deafness. OHCs and IHCs, together with supporting cells, originate embryonically from the prosensory region of the otocyst, but how HCs differentiate into two different types is unknown(1–3). Here we show that Insm1, which encodes a zinc finger protein transiently expressed in nascent OHCs, consolidates their fate by preventing trans-differentiation into IHCs. In the absence of INSM1 many HCs born embryonically as OHCs switch fates to become mature IHCs. In order to identify the genetic mechanisms by which Insm1 operates, we compared transcriptomes of immature IHCs vs OHCs, as well as OHCs with and without INSM1. OHCs lacking INSM1 upregulate a set of genes, most of which are normally preferentially expressed by IHCs. The homeotic cell transformation of OHCs without INSM1 into IHCs reveals for the first time a mechanism by which these neighboring mechanosensory cells begin to differ: INSM1 represses a core set of early IHC-enriched genes in embryonic OHCs and makes them unresponsive to an IHC-inducing gradient, so that they proceed to mature as OHCs. Without INSM1, some of the OHCs upregulating these few IHC-enriched transcripts trans-differentiate into IHCs, revealing the first candidate genes for IHC-specific differentiation. 2018-10-10 2018-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6279423/ /pubmed/30305733 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0570-8 Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Wiwatpanit, Teerawat
Lorenzen, Sarah M.
Cantú, Jorge A.
Foo, Chuan Zhi
Hogan, Ann K.
Márquez, Freddie
Clancy, John C.
Schipma, Matthew J.
Cheatham, Mary Ann
Duggan, Anne
García-Añoveros, Jaime
Trans-differentiation of outer hair cells into inner hair cells in the absence of INSM1
title Trans-differentiation of outer hair cells into inner hair cells in the absence of INSM1
title_full Trans-differentiation of outer hair cells into inner hair cells in the absence of INSM1
title_fullStr Trans-differentiation of outer hair cells into inner hair cells in the absence of INSM1
title_full_unstemmed Trans-differentiation of outer hair cells into inner hair cells in the absence of INSM1
title_short Trans-differentiation of outer hair cells into inner hair cells in the absence of INSM1
title_sort trans-differentiation of outer hair cells into inner hair cells in the absence of insm1
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6279423/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30305733
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0570-8
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