4.7 Article

Global Analysis of Protein Expression of Inner Ear Hair Cells

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
卷 37, 期 5, 页码 1320-1339

出版社

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2267-16.2016

关键词

cochlea; deafness; hair cells; inner ear; mass spectrometry; proteome

资金

  1. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders-National Institutes of Health [R00 DC-013805]
  2. Veterans Administration Research Service (BLS Grant) [BX001295]
  3. Garnett Passe and Rodney Williams Memorial Foundation
  4. National Institutes of Health [P41 GM103533, R01 MH067880]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The mammalian inner ear (IE) subserves auditory and vestibular sensations via highly specialized cells and proteins. Sensory receptor hair cells (HCs) are necessary for transducing mechanical inputs and stimulating sensory neurons by using a host of known and as yet unknown protein machinery. To understand the protein composition of these unique postmitotic cells, in which irreversible protein degradation or damage can lead to impaired hearing and balance, we analyzed IE samples by tandem mass spectrometry to generate an unbiased, shotgun-proteomics view of protein identities and abundances. By using Pou4f3/eGFP-transgenic mice in which HCs express GFP driven by Pou4f3, we FACS purified a population of HCs to analyze and compare the HC proteome with other IE subproteomes from sensory epithelia and whole IE. Weshow that the mammalian HC proteome comprises hundreds of uniquely or highly expressed proteins. Our global proteomic analysis of purified HCs extends the existing HC transcriptome, revealing previously undetected gene products and isoform-specific protein expression. Comparison of our proteomic data with mouse and human databases of genetic auditory/vestibular impairments confirms the critical role of the HC proteome for normal IE function, providing a cell-specific pool of candidates for novel, important HC genes. Several proteins identified exclusively in HCs by proteomics and verified by immunohistochemistry map to human genetic deafness loci, potentially representing new deafness genes.

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