A Mouse Model for Human Deafness DFNB22 Reveals That Hearing Impairment Is Due to a Loss of Inner Hair Cell Stimulation

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A Mouse Model for Human Deafness DFNB22 Reveals That Hearing Impairment Is Due to a Loss of Inner Hair Cell Stimulation A mouse model for human deafness DFNB22 reveals that hearing impairment is due to a loss of inner hair cell stimulation Andrei N. Lukashkina,1, P. Kevin Legana, Thomas D. Weddella,1, Victoria A. Lukashkinaa,1, Richard J. Goodyeara, Lindsey J. Welsteada, Christine Petitb,c,d, Ian J. Russella,1,2, and Guy P. Richardsona,2 aSchool of Life Sciences, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton BN1 9QG, United Kingdom; bInstitut Pasteur, Unité de Génétique et Physiologie de l’Audition, F75015 Paris, France; cInstitut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Unité Mixte de Recherche en Santé 587, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, 75724 Paris, France; and dCollège de France, 75005 Paris, France Edited by Thomas B. Friedman, National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health, Rockville, MD, and accepted by the Editorial Board September 28, 2012 (received for review June 14, 2012) The gene causative for the human nonsyndromic recessive form of reticular lamina and the lower surface of the TM in an ex vivo deafness DFNB22 encodes otoancorin, a 120-kDa inner ear-specific preparation of the guinea pig cochlea provide evidence that, at protein that is expressed on the surface of the spiral limbus in the frequencies below 3 kHz, counterphase transverse movements of cochlea. Gene targeting in ES cells was used to create an EGFP the two surfaces generate pulsatile fluid movements in the sub- EGFP/EGFP EGFP/EGFP knock-in, otoancorin KO (Otoa ) mouse. In the Otoa tectorial space that could drive the hair bundles of the IHCs (10). mouse, the tectorial membrane (TM), a ribbon-like strip of ECM At higher frequencies, the two surfaces move in phase, and radial that is normally anchored by one edge to the spiral limbus and shear alone is thought to dominate. Theoretical studies (11) re- lies over the organ of Corti, retains its general form, and remains veal that the boundary layers will be vanishingly thin at high in close proximity to the organ of Corti, but is detached from the frequencies, that the fluid in the gap between the TM and the limbal surface. Measurements of cochlear microphonic potentials, reticular lamina will be inviscid, and that the hydrodynamic forces distortion product otoacoustic emissions, and basilar membrane on the hair bundle will be inertial. Although an overlying TM that motion indicate that the TM remains functionally attached to the is not directly attached to a hair bundle does not apply torque to electromotile, sensorimotor outer hair cells of the organ of Corti, the hair bundle (11), the inertial force of the fluid driving the hair and that the amplification and frequency tuning of the basilar bundle depends on its mass and therefore the size of the gap membrane responses to sounds are almost normal. The compound between the reticular lamina and the TM (11, 12). action potential masker tuning curves, a measure of the tuning of The TM is composed of radially arrayed collagen fibrils that the sensory inner hair cells, are also sharply tuned, but the thresh- are imbedded in a noncollagenous matrix composed of a number olds of the compound action potentials, a measure of inner hair of different glycoproteins, including Tecta, Tectb, otogelin, oto- cell sensitivity, are significantly elevated. These results indicate lin, and Ceacam16 (13–16). Mutations in Tecta cause recessive that the hearing loss in patients with Otoa mutations is caused (DFNB21) and dominant (DFNA8/12) forms of human heredi- – by a defect in inner hair cell stimulation, and reveal the limbal tary deafness (17 19), and a dominant missense mutation in fi attachment of the TM plays a critical role in this process. Ceacam16 (DFNA4) has been identi ed recently as a cause of late-onset progressive hearing loss in an American family (15). Mutations in Tecta are one of the most common causes of au- he sensory epithelium of the cochlea, the organ of Corti (Fig. tosomal-dominant, nonsyndromic hereditary hearing loss (20), T1), contains two types of hair cell, the purely sensory inner hair cells (IHCs) and the electromotile, sensorimotor outer hair and mouse models for the recessive (21) and dominant (22) cells (OHCs). These cells are critically positioned between two forms of deafness arising from mutations in Tecta have been GENETICS strips of ECM, the basilar membrane (BM) and the tectorial created. Together with data from a Tectb-null mutant mouse membrane (TM). Signal processing in the cochlea is initiated (23), these studies have provided evidence that the TM plays when sound-induced changes in fluid pressure displace the BM multiple roles in hearing (24). Although much is known about in the transverse direction, causing radial shearing displacements the structure of the TM, an ECM that is unique to the cochlea, between the surface of the organ of Corti (the reticular lamina) relatively little is known about how it attaches to the apical and the overlying TM (1). The radial shear is detected by the hair surface of the cochlear epithelium. Otoancorin, a product of the bundles of the IHCs and the OHCs (2), with the stereocilia of DFNB22 locus, is expressed on the apical surface of the spiral the OHC hair bundles forming an elastic link between the organ limbus and has been suggested to mediate TM attachment to this of Corti and the overlying TM (3). Deflection of the stereocilia region of the cochlear epithelium (25). In this study, we use gene gates the hair cell’s mechanoelectrical transducer (MET) chan- targeting to inactivate otoancorin. This provides a mouse model nels, thereby initiating a MET current (4) that promotes active for DFNB22, reveals a loss of IHC sensitivity as the primary mechanical force production by the OHCs, which, in turn, in- fluences mechanical interactions between the TM and the BM (5, 6). This nonlinear frequency-dependent enhancement pro- Author contributions: C.P., I.J.R., and G.P.R. designed research; A.N.L., P.K.L., T.D.W., V.A.L., cess, which boosts the sensitivity of cochlear responses to low- R.J.G., L.J.W., I.J.R., and G.P.R. performed research; P.K.L. contributed new reagents/ana- level sounds and compresses them at high levels, is known as the lytic tools; A.N.L., T.D.W., R.J.G., I.J.R., and G.P.R. analyzed data; and C.P., I.J.R., and G.P.R. cochlear amplifier (7). wrote the paper. Whereas the hair bundles of the OHCs are imbedded into the The authors declare no conflict of interest. TM and therefore directly excited by relative displacement of This article is a PNAS Direct Submission. T.B.F. is a guest editor invited by the the undersurface of the TM and the reticular lamina, those of the Editorial Board. IHCs are not in direct contact with the TM, and the way in which 1Present address: School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences, University of Brighton, they are driven by motion of the BM remains unclear. Intra- Brighton BN2 4GJ, United Kingdom. cellular recordings of the receptor potentials in IHCs indicate 2To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: [email protected] or that the bundles are velocity-coupled (to fluid flow) at low fre- [email protected]. quencies and displacement-coupled at higher frequencies of This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10. stimulation (2, 8, 9). Direct measurements of the motion of the 1073/pnas.1210159109/-/DCSupplemental. www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1210159109 PNAS | November 20, 2012 | vol. 109 | no. 47 | 19351–19356 Downloaded by guest on September 23, 2021 fibril bundles of the TM are, as in heterozygotes and WT, dis- tributed radially within the core of the matrix in the homozygous mutants (Fig. 4 A and B). The covernet, a network formed by fibrils that are aligned mainly along the length of the upper surface of the TM, is also of normal appearance (Fig. 4 A and B). Hensen’s stripe, a ridge that runs longitudinally along the lower surface of the TM and is thought to engage the hair bundle of the IHCs, is, however, not visible in the homozygous mutants (Fig. 4 C and D).These observations show that otoancorin is required for adhesion of the TM to the spiral limbus and that the TM, despite the structural abnormalities described here, retains its Fig. 1. Schematic cross-section of WT cochlea. Spiral lamina (SLAM), spiral gross overall form, remaining in close proximity with the organ ligament (SLIG), inner pillar cells (IPC), outer pillar cells (OPC), Deiters’ cells of Corti. (DC), phalangeal process of DC (PhP), Claudius cells (CC), OHC, IHC, reticular EGFP/EGFP laminar (RL), spiral limbus (SL), and major noncellular elements (BM and TM). Cochlear Microphonic Potentials Are Symmetrical in Otoa Mice. Cochlear microphonic (CM) potentials are extracellular potentials derived from the transducer currents of the OHCs (1, 26– cause of deafness, and isolates a specific role for the limbal at- 28), and their symmetrical nature is known to result from the tachment of the TM in driving the hair bundles of the IHCs. presence of the TM biasing the operating point of the hair bundle (21, 29). Although the TM is detached from the spiral limbus in the Results OtoaEGFP/EGFP mice, the CM potentials recorded from the round GenetargetinginEScellswasusedtoreplacethefirst coding window of OtoaEGFP/EGFP mice are similar to those recorded exon of the murine Otoa gene with a cassette encoding EGFP from WT mice (Fig. 5A), being symmetric at low to moderate (Fig. 2A). Southern blotting with probes located external to the sound levels, becoming negatively and then positively asymmet- targeting vector was used to detect and confirm successful rical with increasing sound levels greater than 80 dB sound targeting (Fig.
Recommended publications
  • Cochlear Partition Anatomy and Motion in Humans Differ from The
    Cochlear partition anatomy and motion in humans differ from the classic view of mammals Stefan Raufera,b,1, John J. Guinan Jra,b,c, and Hideko Heidi Nakajimaa,b,c aEaton-Peabody Laboratories, Massachusetts Eye and Ear, Boston, MA 02114; bSpeech and Hearing Bioscience and Technology Program, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138; and cDepartment of Otolaryngology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115 Edited by Christopher A. Shera, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, and accepted by Editorial Board Member Thomas D. Albright June 6, 2019 (received for review January 16, 2019) Mammals detect sound through mechanosensitive cells of the assume there is no OSL motion (10–13). Additionally, the attach- cochlear organ of Corti that rest on the basilar membrane (BM). ment of the OSL to the BM and the attachment of the TM to Motions of the BM and organ of Corti have been studied at the spiral limbus (which sits above the OSL) are also consid- the cochlear base in various laboratory animals, and the assump- ered stationary. In contrast to this view, there have been reports tion has been that the cochleas of all mammals work similarly. of sound-induced OSL movement, but these reports have been In the classic view, the BM attaches to a stationary osseous spi- largely ignored in overviews of cochlear mechanics and the for- ral lamina (OSL), the tectorial membrane (TM) attaches to the mation of cochlear models (10–13). Von B´ek´esy (14), using static limbus above the stationary OSL, and the BM is the major mov- pressure, found that the CP “bent like an elastic rod that was free ing element, with a peak displacement near its center.
    [Show full text]
  • The Membranous Labyrinth in Vivo from High-Resolution Temporal CT Data
    bioRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/318030; this version posted May 9, 2018. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under aCC-BY-ND 4.0 International license. The Membranous Labyrinth in vivo from high-resolution Temporal CT data Hisaya Tanioka¹* ¹Department of Radiology, Tanioka Clinic *Corresponding author Hisaya Tanioka, MD, PhD Tanioka Clinic Tanioka Bldg. 3F, 6-24-2 Honkomagome Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0021 Japan Tel & Fax: 81-3-3945-5199 E-mail: [email protected] bioRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/318030; this version posted May 9, 2018. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under aCC-BY-ND 4.0 International license. The Membranous Labyrinth in vivo from high-resolution Temporal CT data bioRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/318030; this version posted May 9, 2018. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under aCC-BY-ND 4.0 International license. ABSTRACT A prerequisite for the modeling and understanding of the inner ear mechanics needs the accurate created membranous labyrinth. I present a semi-automated methodology for accurate reconstruction of the membranous labyrinth in vivo from high-resolution temporal bone CT data of normal human subjects.
    [Show full text]
  • Characteristic Anatomical Structures of Rat Temporal Bone
    HOSTED BY Available online at www.sciencedirect.com ScienceDirect Journal of Otology 10 (2015) 118e124 www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-otology/ Characteristic anatomical structures of rat temporal bone Peng Li a,b, Kelei Gao b,c, Dalian Ding a,b,c,*, Richard Salvi b,c a Department of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, The Third Affiliated Hospital, Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou 510630, China b Center for Hearing and Deafness, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14214, USA c Department of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Xiangya Hospital, Central South University, Hunan 410013, China Abstract As most gene sequences and functional structures of internal organs in rats have been well studied, rat models are widely used in experi- mental medical studies. A large number of descriptions and atlas of the rat temporal bone have been published, but some detailed anatomy of its surface and inside structures remains to be studied. By focusing on some unique characteristics of the rat temporal bone, the current paper aims to provide more accurate and detailed information on rat temporal bone anatomy in an attempt to complete missing or unclear areas in the existed knowledge. We also hope this paper can lay a solid foundation for experimental rat temporal bone surgeries, and promote information exchange among colleagues, as well as providing useful guidance for novice researchers in the field of hearing research involving rats. Copyright © 2015 The Authors. Production & hosting by Elsevier (Singapore) Pte Ltd On behalf of PLA General Hospital Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ by-nc-nd/4.0/).
    [Show full text]
  • Mmubn000001 20756843X.Pdf
    PDF hosted at the Radboud Repository of the Radboud University Nijmegen The following full text is a publisher's version. For additional information about this publication click this link. http://hdl.handle.net/2066/147581 Please be advised that this information was generated on 2021-10-07 and may be subject to change. CATION TRANSPORT AND COCHLEAR FUNCTION CATION TRANSPORT AND COCHLEAR FUNCTION PROMOTORES: Prof. Dr. S. L. BONTING EN Prof. Dr. W. F. B. BRINKMAN CATION TRANSPORT AND COCHLEAR FUNCTION PROEFSCHRIFT TER VERKRIJGING VAN DE GRAAD VAN DOCTOR IN DE WISKUNDE EN NATUURWETENSCHAPPEN AAN DE KATHOLIEKE UNIVERSITEIT TE NIJMEGEN, OP GEZAG VAN DE RECTOR MAGNIFICUS DR. G. BRENNINKMEIJER, HOOGLERAAR IN DE FACULTEIT DER SOCIALE WETENSCHAPPEN, VOLGENS BESLUIT VAN DE SENAAT IN HET OPENBAAR TE VERDEDIGEN OP VRIJDAG 19 DECEMBER 1969 DES NAMIDDAGS TE 2 UUR DOOR WILLIBRORDUS KUIJPERS GEBOREN TE KLOOSTERZANDE 1969 CENTRALE DRUKKERIJ NIJMEGEN I am greatly indebted to Dr. J. F. G. Siegers for his interest and many valuable discussions throughout the course of this investigation. The technical assistance of Miss A. C. H. Janssen, Mr. A. C. van der Vleuten and Mr. P. Spaan and co-workers was greatly appreciated. I also wish to express my gratitude to Miss. A. E. Gonsalvcs and Miss. G. Kuijpers for typing and to Mrs. M. Duncan for correcting the ma­ nuscript. The diagrams were prepared by Mr W. Maas and Mr. C. Reckers and the micro- photographs by Mr. A. Reijnen of the department of medical illustration. Aan mijn Ouders, l Thea, Annemarie, Katrien en Michiel. CONTENTS GENERAL INTRODUCTION ...
    [Show full text]
  • Inner Ear Defects and Hearing Loss in Mice Lacking the Collagen Receptor
    Laboratory Investigation (2008) 88, 27–37 & 2008 USCAP, Inc All rights reserved 0023-6837/08 $30.00 Inner ear defects and hearing loss in mice lacking the collagen receptor DDR1 Angela M Meyer zum Gottesberge1, Oliver Gross2, Ursula Becker-Lendzian1, Thomas Massing1 and Wolfgang F Vogel3 Discoidin domain receptor 1 (DDR1) is a tyrosine kinase receptor that is activated by native collagen. The physiological functions of DDR1 include matrix homeostasis and cell growth, adhesion, branching, and migration, but the specific role of DDR1 in the development and function of the inner ear has not been analyzed. Here, we show that deletion of the DDR1 gene in mouse is associated with a severe decrease in auditory function and substantial structural alterations in the inner ear. Immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated DDR1 expression in several locations in the cochlea, mostly associated with basement membrane and fibrillar collagens; in particular in basal cells of the stria vascularis, type III fibrocytes, and cells lining the basilar membrane of the organ of Corti. In the stria vascularis, loss of DDR1 function resulted in altered morphology of the basal cells and accumulation of electron-dense matrix within the strial epithelial layer in conjunction with a focal and progressive deterioration of strial cells. Cell types in proximity to the basilar membrane, such as Claudius’, inner and outer sulcus cells, also showed marked ultrastructural alterations. Changes in the organ of Corti, such as deterioration of the supporting cells, specifically the outer hair cells, Deiters’, Hensen’s and bordering cells, are likely to interfere with mechanical properties of the organ and may be responsible for the hearing loss observed in DDR1-null mice.
    [Show full text]
  • Microstructures of the Osseous Spiral Laminae in the Bat Cochlea: a Scanning Electron Microscopic Study
    Arch. Histol. Cytol., Vol. 55, No. 3 (1992) p. 315-319 Microstructures of the Osseous Spiral Laminae in the Bat Cochlea: A Scanning Electron Microscopic Study Babi r KUcUK2 and Kazuhiro ABE1 Department of Anatomy, Hokkaido University School of Medicine, Sapporo, Hokkaido; and Department of Otolaryngology2, Tokai University School of Medicine, Isehara, Kanagawa, Japan Received May 22, 1992 Summary. The architecture and surface structures of dary osseous spiral laminae. High frequency sounds the primary and secondary osseous spiral laminae in the vibrate the membrane in the basal regions of the cochlea of the bat, an animal able to hear high fre- cochlear duct, while relatively lower frequency quency sounds, were examined by scanning electron sounds vibrate the membrane in the apical regions microscopy to understand the micromechanical adapta- (BEKESY, 1960) . Using the mouse cochlea, we have tions of the bony supportive elements in the inner ear to suggested that the regional vibration pattern of the the specific hearing function. The bat used was Myotis frater kaguyae. basilar membrane is closely related to the base-to- The myotis bat cochlea was seen to consist of a hook apex variations in the morphology of the osseous and a spiral portion with one and three-quarter turns spiral laminae (KUcUK and ABE, 1989). It is known and was characterized by: 1) a distinct ridge-like pro- that the bat cochlea is sensitive to sounds in the very jection running spirally along the middle line on the high frequency range. In fact, the frequencies of the vestibular leaf of the primary osseous spiral lamina; 2) sounds that stimulate the basilar membrane in the a wide secondary osseous spiral lamina; and 3) a narrow bat cochlea are higher than those that stimulate the spiral fissure between the primary and secondary osse- basal regions of the basilar membrane in the mouse ous spiral laminae.
    [Show full text]
  • Otoancorin, an Inner Ear Protein Restricted To
    Otoancorin, an inner ear protein restricted to the interface between the apical surface of sensory epithelia and their overlying acellular gels, is defective in autosomal recessive deafness DFNB22 Ingrid Zwaenepoel*, Mirna Mustapha*, Michel Leibovici*, Elisabeth Verpy*, Richard Goodyear†, Xue Zhong Liu‡, Sylvie Nouaille*, Walter E. Nance§, Moien Kanaan¶, Karen B. Avrahamʈ, Fredj Tekaia**, Jacques Loiselet††, Marc Lathrop‡‡, Guy Richardson†, and Christine Petit*¶¶ *Unite´deGe´ne´ tique des De´ficits Sensoriels, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Unite´de Recherche Associe´e 1968, and **Unite´deGe´ne´ tique Mole´culaire des Levures, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Unite´de Recherche Associe´e 2171, Institut Pasteur, 25 rue du Dr. Roux, 75724 Paris Cedex 15, France; †School of Biological Sciences, The University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton, BN1 9QG, United Kingdom; ‡Department of Otolaryngology, University of Miami, Miami, FL 33101; §Department of Human Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University, 1101 East Marshall Street, Richmond, VA 23219; ¶Molecular Genetics, Life Science Department, Bethlehem University POB 9, Palestinian Authority; ʈDepartment of Human Genetics and Molecular Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel; ††Laboratoire de Biologie Mole´culaire, Faculte´deMe´ decine, Universite´Saint-Joseph, Beyrouth, Lebanon; and ‡‡Centre National de Ge´notypage, 91057 Evry, France Edited by Thaddeus P. Dryja, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, and approved February 21, 2002 (received for review October 1, 2001) A 3,673-bp murine cDNA predicted to encode a glycosylphosphati- collagenase-insensitive striated-sheet matrix (6). Otogelin is asso- dylinositol-anchored protein of 1,088 amino acids was isolated ciated mainly with the collagen fibril bundles (3, 7), whereas ␣- and during a study aimed at identifying transcripts specifically ex- ␤-tectorin are major components of the striated-sheet matrix (8, 9).
    [Show full text]
  • Degeneration and Reorganization of Vestibular Epithelia After Local Aminoglycoside Application in the Mammalian Inner Ear
    Scanning Microscopy Volume 7 Number 2 Article 16 3-5-1993 Degeneration and Reorganization of Vestibular Epithelia after Local Aminoglycoside Application in the Mammalian Inner Ear J. Dupont University of Michigan, Ann Arbor A. Guilhaume Université de Bordeaux II J. -M. Aran Université de Bordeaux II Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/microscopy Part of the Biology Commons Recommended Citation Dupont, J.; Guilhaume, A.; and Aran, J. -M. (1993) "Degeneration and Reorganization of Vestibular Epithelia after Local Aminoglycoside Application in the Mammalian Inner Ear," Scanning Microscopy: Vol. 7 : No. 2 , Article 16. Available at: https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/microscopy/vol7/iss2/16 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Western Dairy Center at DigitalCommons@USU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Scanning Microscopy by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@USU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Scanning Microscopy, Vol. 7, No. 2, 1993 (Pages 597-612) 0891-7035/93$5.00+ .00 Scanning Microscopy International, Chicago (AMF O'Hare), IL 60666 USA DEGENERATION AND REORGANIZATION OF VESTIBULAR EPITHELIA AFTER LOCAL AMINOGLYCOSIDE APPLICATION IN THE MAMMALIAN INNER EAR J. Dupont*· 1, A. Guilhaume and J.-M. Aran Laboratoire d' Audiologie Experimentale, INS ERM U .229 and Universite de Bordeaux II, H6pital Pellegrin, place Amelie Raba Leon, 33076 BORDEAUX, FRANCE 1Present Address: Kresge Hearing Research Institute, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI,
    [Show full text]
  • A Protocol for Decellularizing Mouse Cochleae for Inner Ear Tissue Engineering
    Journal of Visualized Experiments www.jove.com Video Article A Protocol for Decellularizing Mouse Cochleae for Inner Ear Tissue Engineering Christopher A. Neal1, Jennifer G. Nelson-Brantley1, Michael S. Detamore2, Hinrich Staecker1, Adam J. Mellott3 1 Department of Otolaryngology, University of Kansas Medical Center 2 Stephenson School of Biomedical Engineering, University of Oklahoma 3 Department of Plastic Surgery, University of Kansas Medical Center Correspondence to: Adam J. Mellott at [email protected] URL: https://www.jove.com/video/56523 DOI: doi:10.3791/56523 Keywords: Bioengineering, : Cochlea, hair cell, scaffold, decellularize, Wharton's jelly cells, tissue engineering, cell culture Date Published: 12/14/2017 Citation: Neal, C.A., Nelson-Brantley, J.G., Detamore, M.S., Staecker, H., Mellott, A.J. A Protocol for Decellularizing Mouse Cochleae for Inner Ear Tissue Engineering. J. Vis. Exp. (), e56523, doi:10.3791/56523 (2017). Abstract In mammals, mechanosensory hair cells that facilitate hearing lack the ability to regenerate, which has limited treatments for hearing loss. Current regenerative medicine strategies have focused on transplanting stem cells or genetic manipulation of surrounding support cells in the inner ear to encourage replacement of damaged stem cells to correct hearing loss. Yet, the extracellular matrix (ECM) may play a vital role in inducing and maintaining function of hair cells, and has not been well investigated. Using the cochlear ECM as a scaffold to grow adult stem cells may provide unique insights into how the composition and architecture of the extracellular environment aids cells in sustaining hearing function. Here we present a method for isolating and decellularizing cochleae from mice to use as scaffolds accepting perfused adult stem cells.
    [Show full text]
  • Original Article Localization of Gentamicin Uptake in the Acutely Isolated Inner Ear of the Rat
    Int J Physiol Pathophysiol Pharmacol 2011;3(2):71-87 www.ijppp.org /ISSN:1944-8171/IJPPP1102003 Original Article Localization of gentamicin uptake in the acutely isolated inner ear of the rat Katharina Schmid, Jürgen Strutz, Otto Gleich, Pingling Kwok Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, University of Regensburg, Franz-Josef-Strauß-Allee 11, D- 93042 Regensburg, Germany Received February 25, 2011; accepted March 23 2011; Epub March 28, 2011; Published June 30, 2011 Abstract: The quantitative analysis of fluorescence in frozen sections of rat inner ears exposed to Texas Red conjugated gentamicin revealed distinct gradients of gentamicin fluorescence. At 500 µg/ml gentamicin fluorescence occurred in inner and outer hair cells, the interdental cell region, the spiral limbus below the interdental cells, the nerve fiber bundle in the spiral lamina, the inner sulcus cells and the dorsal region of the spiral ligament. No gentamicin fluorescence was observed in the Hensen / Claudius cells, the ventral region of the spiral ligament, the stria vascularis and the spiral ganglion. In the vestibule only the hair cell epithelium and the transitional cells of the saccule showed gentamicin fluorescence while no gentamicin fluorescence was found in hair cell epithelia and transitional cells of utricle and ampule, nerve fibers below hair cell epithelia of saccule, utricle and ampule and in dark cells. The gentamicin flurescence increased at higher concentrations. Gentamicin exposure led to more pronounced gentamicin fluorescence in the cochlea compared to the vestibule. Based on the predominant gentamicin fluorescence in the hair cell - limbus region of the cochlea at a low dose we propose that gentamicin may interact with the K+-flow from the inner hair cells back to the scala media.
    [Show full text]
  • Large Vestibular Aqueduct and Congenital Sensorineural Hearing Loss
    Large Vestibular Aqueduct and Congenital Sensorineural Hearing Loss Mahmood F. Mafee, 1 Dale Char/etta, Arvind Kumar, and Hera/do Belmonf From the Department of Radiology, University of Illinois at Chicago (MAM), the Department of Radiology, Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center (DC), and the Department of Otolaryngalogy-Head and Neck Surgery, University of Illinois at Chicago (AK) The inner ear is composed of the membranous All of the structures of the membranous laby­ labyrinth and the osseous labyrinth (1). The mem­ rinth are enclosed within hollowed-out bony cav­ branous labyrinth has two major subdivisions, a ities that are considerably larger than their mem­ sensory portion called the sensory labyrinth and branous contents. These bony cavities assume a nonsensory portion designated the nonsensory the same shape as the membranous chambers labyrinth. and are referred to as the osseous labyrinth. The The sensory labyrinth lies within the petrous bony cavities of the osseous labyrinth are lined portion of the temporal bone. It contains two by periosteum and contain fluid, known as peri­ intercommunicating portions: 1) the cochlear lab­ lymph, that bathes the external surface of the yrinth that consists of the cochlea and is con­ membranous labyrinth. The perilymph is rich in cerned with hearing, and 2) the vestibular laby­ . sodium ions and poor in potassium ions and is rinth that contains the utricle, saccule, and sem­ roughly comparable with extracellular tissue fluid icircular canals, all of which are concerned with or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). It appears to act as equilibrium. These hollow chambers are filled a hydraulic shock absorber to protect the mem­ with fluid, known as endolymph, that resembles branous labyrinth.
    [Show full text]
  • Dynamic Patterns of Neurotrophin 3 Expression in the Postnatal Mouse Inner Ear
    THE JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY 501:30–37 (2007) Dynamic Patterns of Neurotrophin 3 Expression in the Postnatal Mouse Inner Ear MITSURU SUGAWARA,1,2,3 JOSHUA C. MURTIE,1 KONSTANTINA M. STANKOVIC,1,2 M. CHARLES LIBERMAN,2 AND GABRIEL CORFAS1* 1Neurobiology Program, Children’s Hospital and Department of Neurology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115 2Department of Otology and Laryngology, Harvard Medical School and Eaton-Peabody Laboratory, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, Massachusetts 02114-3096 3Department of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, Sendai, Japan 980-8574 ABSTRACT Recent studies indicate that neurotrophin 3 (NT3) may be important for the maintenance and function of the adult inner ear, but the pattern of postnatal NT3 expression in this organ has not been characterized. We used a reporter mouse in which cells expressing NT3 also express ␤-galactosidase, allowing for their histochemical visualization, to determine the pattern of NT3 expression in cochlear and vestibular organs. We analyzed animals from birth (P0) to adult (P135). At P0, NT3 was strongly expressed in supporting cells and hair cells of all vestibular and cochlear sense organs, Reissner’s membrane, saccular membrane, and the dark cells adjacent to canal organs. With increasing age, staining disappeared in most cell types but remained rela- tively high in inner hair cells (IHCs) and to a lesser extent in IHC supporting cells. In the cochlea, by P0 there is a longitudinal gradient (apex Ͼ base) that persists into adulthood. In vestibular maculae, staining gradients are: striolar Ͼ extrastriolar regions and supporting cells Ͼ hair cells.
    [Show full text]