4.7 Article

New Tmc1 Deafness Mutations Impact Mechanotransduction in Auditory Hair Cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 41, Issue 20, Pages 4378-4391

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2537-20.2021

Keywords

cochlea; deafness; Hair cell; mechanotransduction channel; TMC1

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute on Deafness and other Communication Disorders [RO1 DC015439, RO1 DC01362]
  2. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Intramural Research Program [NS002945]
  3. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1 TR000135]
  4. Mayo Clinic Center for Individualized Medicine
  5. Mayo Clinic Department of Otorhinolaryngology

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TMC1 is a crucial protein in causing deafness, with mutations like T422K affecting Ca2+ permeability and resting open probability of the MET channel. Adjacent mutations to TMC1, such as L416R, G417R, and M418K, show similar channel effects in mice, suggesting a common mechanism for deafness. Comparisons between dominant and recessive mutations near the channel pore reveal differences in channel conductance and transduction loss.
Transmembrane channel-like protein isoform 1 (TMC1) is a major component of the mechano-electrical transducer (MET) channel in cochlear hair cells and is subject to numerous mutations causing deafness. We report a new dominant human deafness mutation, TMC1 p.T422K, and have characterized the homologous mouse mutant, Tmc1 p.T416K, which caused deafness and outer hair cell (OHC) loss by the fourth postnatal week. MET channels showed decreased Ca2+ permeability and resting open probability, but no change in single-channel conductance or expression. Three adjacent deafness mutations are TMC1 p.L416R, p.G417R, and p.M418K, the last homologous to the mouse Beethoven that exhibits similar channel effects. All substitute a positive for a neutral residue, which could produce charge screening in the channel pore or influence binding of an accessory subunit. Channel properties were compared in mice of both sexes between dominant (Tmc1 p.T416K, Tmc1 p.D569N) and recessive (Tmc1 p.W554L, Tmc1 p.D528N) mutations of residues near the putative pore of the channel. Tmc1 p.W554L and p.D569N exhibit reduced maximum current with no effect on single-channel conductance, implying a smaller number of channels transported to the stereociliary tips; this may stem from impaired TMC1 binding to LHFPL5. Tmc1 p.D528N, located in the pore's narrowest region, uniquely caused large reductions in MET channel conductance and block by dihydrostreptomycin (DHS). For Tmc1 p.T416K and Tmc1 p.D528N, transduction loss occurred between P15 and P20. We propose two mechanisms linking channel mutations and deafness: decreased Ca2+ permeability, common to all mutants, and decreased resting open probability in low Ca2+, confined to dominant mutations.

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