Literature DB >> 22105175

Mechanotransduction in mouse inner ear hair cells requires transmembrane channel-like genes.

Yoshiyuki Kawashima1, Gwenaëlle S G Géléoc, Kiyoto Kurima, Valentina Labay, Andrea Lelli, Yukako Asai, Tomoko Makishima, Doris K Wu, Charles C Della Santina, Jeffrey R Holt, Andrew J Griffith.   

Abstract

Inner ear hair cells convert the mechanical stimuli of sound, gravity, and head movement into electrical signals. This mechanotransduction process is initiated by opening of cation channels near the tips of hair cell stereocilia. Since the identity of these ion channels is unknown, and mutations in the gene encoding transmembrane channel-like 1 (TMC1) cause hearing loss without vestibular dysfunction in both mice and humans, we investigated the contribution of Tmc1 and the closely related Tmc2 to mechanotransduction in mice. We found that Tmc1 and Tmc2 were expressed in mouse vestibular and cochlear hair cells and that GFP-tagged TMC proteins localized near stereocilia tips. Tmc2 expression was transient in early postnatal mouse cochlear hair cells but persisted in vestibular hair cells. While mice with a targeted deletion of Tmc1 (Tmc1(Δ) mice) were deaf and those with a deletion of Tmc2 (Tmc2(Δ) mice) were phenotypically normal, Tmc1(Δ)Tmc2(Δ) mice had profound vestibular dysfunction, deafness, and structurally normal hair cells that lacked all mechanotransduction activity. Expression of either exogenous TMC1 or TMC2 rescued mechanotransduction in Tmc1(Δ)Tmc2(Δ) mutant hair cells. Our results indicate that TMC1 and TMC2 are necessary for hair cell mechanotransduction and may be integral components of the mechanotransduction complex. Our data also suggest that persistent TMC2 expression in vestibular hair cells may preserve vestibular function in humans with hearing loss caused by TMC1 mutations.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22105175      PMCID: PMC3223072          DOI: 10.1172/JCI60405

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Invest        ISSN: 0021-9738            Impact factor:   14.808


  52 in total

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3.  A quantitative analysis of the spatiotemporal pattern of transient receptor potential gene expression in the developing mouse cochlea.

Authors:  Yukako Asai; Jeffrey R Holt; Gwenaëlle S G Géléoc
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4.  Topology of transmembrane channel-like gene 1 protein.

Authors:  Valentina Labay; Rachel M Weichert; Tomoko Makishima; Andrew J Griffith
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2010-09-08       Impact factor: 3.162

5.  A novel mutation adjacent to the Bth mouse mutation in the TMC1 gene makes this mouse an excellent model of human deafness at the DFNA36 locus.

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  201 in total

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3.  Stiffness and tension gradients of the hair cell's tip-link complex in the mammalian cochlea.

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5.  Generation of inner ear hair cells by direct lineage conversion of primary somatic cells.

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7.  Tmc gene therapy restores auditory function in deaf mice.

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8.  TMC Proteins Modulate Egg Laying and Membrane Excitability through a Background Leak Conductance in C. elegans.

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Review 9.  Sound strategies for hearing restoration.

Authors:  Gwenaëlle S G Géléoc; Jeffrey R Holt
Journal:  Science       Date:  2014-05-09       Impact factor: 47.728

10.  Mutations of TMC1 cause deafness by disrupting mechanoelectrical transduction.

Authors:  Hiroshi Nakanishi; Kiyoto Kurima; Yoshiyuki Kawashima; Andrew J Griffith
Journal:  Auris Nasus Larynx       Date:  2014-06-02       Impact factor: 1.863

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