| Literature DB >> 28052261 |
Makoto Hosoya1, Masato Fujioka1, Takefumi Sone2, Satoshi Okamoto2, Wado Akamatsu3, Hideki Ukai4, Hiroki R Ueda5, Kaoru Ogawa1, Tatsuo Matsunaga6, Hideyuki Okano7.
Abstract
Hearing impairments are the most common symptom of congenital defects, and they generally remain intractable to treatment. Pendred syndrome, the most frequent syndromic form of hereditary hearing loss, is associated with mutations in the anion exchanger pendrin. Loss of pendrin function as an anion exchanger is thought to be causative, but rodent models do not exhibit progressive deafness. Here, we report a degenerative phenotype exhibiting mutant pendrin aggregates and increased susceptibility to cellular stresses in cochlear epithelial cells induced from patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). These degenerative phenotypes were rescued by site-specific gene corrections. Moreover, low-dose rapamycin and metformin reduced aggregation and cell death. Our results provide an unexpected, comprehensive understanding of deafness due to "degenerative cochlear disease" and may contribute to rational therapeutic development. This iPSC-based disease model provides an approach to the study of pathogenesis and therapeutic development for hereditary hearing loss.Entities:
Keywords: Pendred syndrome; disease-specific iPS cells; inner ear; outer sulcus cells
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28052261 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.12.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423