4.7 Article

Gene Expression by Mouse Inner Ear Hair Cells during Development

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 35, Issue 16, Pages 6366-6380

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5126-14.2015

Keywords

cochlea; development; FACS; hair cell; RNA-Seq; vestibule

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01-DC000304, R01-DC002281, R03-DC013866, R01-DC006908]
  2. Frederick and Ines Yeatts Hair Cell Regeneration Grant
  3. Hearing Health Foundation Emerging Research Grant
  4. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke P30 Core Center Grant [NS072030]
  5. [P30 DC05209]

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Hair cells of the inner ear are essential for hearing and balance. As a consequence, pathogenic variants in genes specifically expressed in hair cells often cause hereditary deafness. Hair cells are few in number and not easily isolated from the adjacent supporting cells, so the biochemistry and molecular biology of hair cells can be difficult to study. To study gene expression in hair cells, we developed a protocol for hair cell isolation by FACS. With nearly pure hair cells and surrounding cells, from cochlea and utricle and from E16 to P7, we performed a comprehensive cell type-specific RNA-Seq study of gene expression during mouse inner ear development. Expression profiling revealed new hair cell genes with distinct expression patterns: some are specific for vestibular hair cells, others for cochlear hair cells, and some are expressed just before or after maturation of mechanosensitivity. We found that many of the known hereditary deafness genes are much more highly expressed in hair cells than surrounding cells, suggesting that genes preferentially expressed in hair cells are good candidates for unknown deafness genes.

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