| Literature DB >> 36104704 |
Song Yi Youn1, Hyehyun Min2, Se Rok Jeong3, Jiahn Lee1, Seok Jun Moon3, Jinwoong Bok2, Chul Hoon Kim4.
Abstract
Tubby mice exhibit hearing impairment due to the loss of stereocilin from the tip regions that connect the tallest stereocilia of the outer hair cells (OHCs) to the tectorial membrane. Stereocilin is an essential stereociliary protein in the OHCs, the mutation of which in humans causes autosomal recessive non-syndromic deafness. Map1a is a modifier of tubby hearing (moth1), and its wild-type allele, rather than the moth1 allele from the C57BL/6 J strain, restores stereocilin localization to the stereocilia and rescues the hearing impairment of tubby mice. The mechanism by which MAP1A accomplishes this is unclear, partly due to ambiguity regarding whether the tubby mutation is a true null. We therefore generated Tub-null (Tub-/-) mice by deleting exon 3 and found that they exhibit hearing impairment like that of tubby mice, suggesting the tubby mutation is a loss-of-function mutation with regard to hearing. When we crossed Tub-/- mice with AKR mice that have wild-type Map1a alleles, we found that wild-type MAP1A restores stereocilin localization to the tips of stereocilia and rescues hearing impairment. These data suggest MAP1A does not require interaction with tubby protein in maintaining stereocilin at the tips of stereocilia and that OHCs use two independent molecules-MAP1A and tubby-to doubly ensure proper stereocilin localization.Entities:
Keywords: Cochlear; MAP1A; Stereocilia; Stereocilin; Tubby
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36104704 PMCID: PMC9472429 DOI: 10.1186/s13041-022-00966-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Brain ISSN: 1756-6606 Impact factor: 4.399
Fig. 1Wild-type MAP1A can rescue hearing impairment and preserve the localization of stereocilin to the tips of stereocilia in the absence of tubby protein. A Tub mice were crossed with E2a-Cre mice expressing Cre in germ cells to produce null mutant mice. B Absence of a tubby protein band at the expected molecular size of approximately 63 kDa in western blots of the brain lysates from tubby mice and Tub-null mice. C Immunostaining of stereocilin in the stereocilia of 5–7-week-old control B6J (wild-type or Tub±) and Tub-null mice. A representative image from one of three experiments is shown. Arrows indicate the localization of stereocilin in the stereocilia. Scale bars: low-magnification images, 5 mm; high-magnification images, 0.5 mm. D, E ABR (D) and DPOAE (E) were measured in 5–7-week-old control (wild-type or Tub±), Tub−/− (Tub−/−; Map1a) and Tub−/−; Map1a mice. Tub-null mice were crossed with AKR/N mice which have a Map1a allele. Tub±; Map1a mice were crossed together to generate Tub−/−; Map1a mice. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001 compared to Tub−/−; Map1a mice. n = 4–6. F, G Tub mice were crossed with Pax2-Cre mice. Tub; Pax2-Cre mice were crossed together to generate Tub; Pax2-Cre mice. ABR (F) and DPOAE (G) were measured in 5–7-week-old Tub and Tub; Pax2-Cre mice. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001 compared to Tub mice. n = 4. H Immunostaining of stereocilin was performed in control B6J (wild-type or Tub±), Tub−/− (Tub−/−; Map1a) and Tub−/−; Map1a mice. A representative image from one of three experiments is shown. Arrows indicate the localization of stereocilin in the stereocilia. I Quantification of stereocilin fluorescence intensity in the tallest row of stereocilia. Average fluorescent intensity was measured in 13–20 hair cells per mouse and averaged across three mice for each group. Images were analyzed using ImageJ. J Quantification of the number of the tallest stereocilia with stereocilin at their tips. Eight to ten hair cells in each mouse were counted and averaged across three mice for each group. All data are presented as means ± SEM