Abstract

Lgr5+ supporting cells (SCs) are enriched hair cell (HC) progenitors in the cochlea. Both in vitro and in vivo studies have shown that HC injury can spontaneously activate Lgr5+ progenitors to regenerate HCs in the neonatal mouse cochlea. Promoting HC regeneration requires the understanding of the mechanism of HC regeneration, and this requires knowledge of the key genes involved in HC injury-induced self-repair responses that promote the proliferation and differentiation of Lgr5+ progenitors. Here, as expected, we found that neomycin-treated Lgr5+ progenitors (NLPs) had significantly greater HC regeneration ability, and greater but not significant proliferation ability compared to untreated Lgr5+ progenitors (ULPs) in response to neomycin exposure. Next, we used RNA-seq analysis to determine the differences in the gene-expression profiles between the transcriptomes of NLPs and ULPs from the neonatal mouse cochlea. We first analyzed the genes that were enriched and differentially expressed in NLPs and ULPs and then analyzed the cell cycle genes, the transcription factors, and the signaling pathway genes that might regulate the proliferation and differentiation of Lgr5+ progenitors. We found 9 cell cycle genes, 88 transcription factors, 8 microRNAs, and 16 cell-signaling pathway genes that were significantly upregulated or downregulated after neomycin injury in NLPs. Lastly, we constructed a protein-protein interaction network to show the interaction and connections of genes that are differentially expressed in NLPs and ULPs. This study has identified the genes that might regulate the proliferation and HC regeneration of Lgr5+ progenitors after neomycin injury, and investigations into the roles and mechanisms of these genes in the cochlea should be performed in the future to identify potential therapeutic targets for HC regeneration.

Highlights

  • Sensory hair cells (HCs) in the inner ear are specialized mechanoreceptors for sound recognition

  • We found that significantly more tdTomato/Myo7a double-positive HCs were generated from neomycin-treated Lgr5+ progenitors (NLPs) compared to untreated Lgr5+ progenitors (ULPs) in all three turns of the cochlea (Figures 1B–D, p < 0.05, n ≧ 4), suggesting that the Lgr5+ progenitors generated significantly more HCs after neomycin injury in vitro

  • We found that Cdkn1a, Mdm2, Tfdp1, and Wee1 were significantly upregulated in NLPs and that Ccne2, Gadd45g, Nek2, Sfn, and Stmn1 were significantly downregulated in ULPs (Figure 6A)

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Summary

Introduction

Sensory hair cells (HCs) in the inner ear are specialized mechanoreceptors for sound recognition. HC injury in the neonatal mouse cochlea can initiate self-repair processes that involve the spontaneous regeneration of HCs from these Lgr5+ progenitors, and this has been demonstrated both in vitro and in vivo (Bramhall et al, 2014; Cox et al, 2014). This regenerative ability is lost as the mice age and disappears completely by the time they reach adulthood (White et al, 2006; Oesterle et al, 2008; Cox et al, 2014)

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