4.7 Article

Wnt-Responsive Lgr5-Expressing Stem Cells Are Hair Cell Progenitors in the Cochlea

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 32, Issue 28, Pages 9639-9648

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1064-12.2012

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Funding

  1. National Institute on Deafness
  2. Other Communicative Disorders [RO1 DC007174, P30 DC05209, RO3 DC010270]
  3. Wiggins Fellowship in Inner Ear Biology

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Auditory hair cells are surrounded on their basolateral aspects by supporting cells, and these two cell types together constitute the sensory epithelium of the organ of Corti, which is the hearing apparatus of the ear. We show here that Lgr5, a marker for adult stem cells, was expressed in a subset of supporting cells in the newborn and adult murine cochlea. Lgr5-expressing supporting cells, sorted by flow cytometry and cultured in a single-cell suspension, compared with unsorted cells, displayed an enhanced capacity for self-renewing neurosphere formation in response to Wnt and were converted to hair cells at a higher (> 10-fold) rate. The greater differentiation of hair cells in the neurosphere assay showed that Lgr5-positive cells had the capacity to act as cochlear progenitor cells, and lineage tracing confirmed that Lgr5-expressing cells accounted for the cells that formed neurospheres and differentiated to hair cells. The responsiveness to Wnt of cells with a capacity for division and sensory cell formation suggests a potential route to new hair cell generation in the adult cochlea.

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