| Literature DB >> 27162350 |
Oscar Diaz-Horta1, Clemer Abad1, Levent Sennaroglu2, Joseph Foster1, Alexandra DeSmidt3, Guney Bademci1, Suna Tokgoz-Yilmaz2, Duygu Duman4, F Basak Cengiz4, M'hamed Grati5, Suat Fitoz6, Xue Z Liu5, Amjad Farooq7, Faiqa Imtiaz8, Benjamin B Currall9, Cynthia Casson Morton10, Michiru Nishita11, Yasuhiro Minami11, Zhongmin Lu3, Katherina Walz12, Mustafa Tekin13.
Abstract
Hair cells of the inner ear, the mechanosensory receptors, convert sound waves into neural signals that are passed to the brain via the auditory nerve. Little is known about the molecular mechanisms that govern the development of hair cell-neuronal connections. We ascertained a family with autosomal recessive deafness associated with a common cavity inner ear malformation and auditory neuropathy. Via whole-exome sequencing, we identified a variant (c.2207G>C, p.R736T) in ROR1 (receptor tyrosine kinase-like orphan receptor 1), cosegregating with deafness in the family and absent in ethnicity-matched controls. ROR1 is a tyrosine kinase-like receptor localized at the plasma membrane. At the cellular level, the mutation prevents the protein from reaching the cellular membrane. In the presence of WNT5A, a known ROR1 ligand, the mutated ROR1 fails to activate NF-κB. Ror1 is expressed in the inner ear during development at embryonic and postnatal stages. We demonstrate that Ror1 mutant mice are severely deaf, with preserved otoacoustic emissions. Anatomically, mutant mice display malformed cochleae. Axons of spiral ganglion neurons show fasciculation defects. Type I neurons show impaired synapses with inner hair cells, and type II neurons display aberrant projections through the cochlear sensory epithelium. We conclude that Ror1 is crucial for spiral ganglion neurons to innervate auditory hair cells. Impairment of ROR1 function largely affects development of the inner ear and hearing in humans and mice.Entities:
Keywords: NF-κB; deafness; inner ear; innervation; whole-exome sequencing
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27162350 PMCID: PMC4889368 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1522512113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205