Abstract

BackgroundHair cell loss in the cochlea is caused by ototoxic drugs, aging, and environmental stresses and could potentially lead to devastating pathophysiological effects. In adult mammals, hair cell loss is irreversible and may result in hearing and balance deficits. In contrast, nonmammalian vertebrates, including birds, can regenerate hair cells through differentiation of supporting cells and restore inner ear function, suggesting that hair cell progenitors are present in the population of supporting cells.ResultsIn the present study, we aimed to identify novel genes related to regeneration in the chicken utricle by gene expression profiling of supporting cell and hair cell populations obtained by laser capture microdissection. The volcano plot identified 408 differentially expressed genes (twofold change, p = 0.05, Benjamini–Hochberg multiple testing correction), 175 of which were well annotated. Among these genes, we focused on Musashi-1 (MSI1), a marker of neural stem cells involved in Notch signaling, and the downstream genes in the Notch pathway. Higher expression of these genes in supporting cells compared with that in hair cells was confirmed by quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction. Immunohistochemistry analysis demonstrated that MSI1 was mainly localized at the basal side of the supporting cell layer in normal chick utricles. During the regeneration period following aminoglycoside antibiotic-induced damage of chicken utricles, the expression levels of MSI1, hairy and enhancer of split-5, and cyclin D1 were increased, and BrdU labeling indicated that cell proliferation was enhanced.ConclusionsThe findings of this study suggested that MSI1 played an important role in the proliferation of supporting cells in the inner ear during normal and damaged conditions and could be a potential therapeutic target in the treatment of vestibular defects.

Highlights

  • Hair cell loss in the cochlea is caused by ototoxic drugs, aging, and environmental stresses and could potentially lead to devastating pathophysiological effects

  • Among the 175 selected annotated genes, we focused on Musashi-1 (MSI1), a transcription factor that functions as a key signaling molecule in the Notch pathway and plays a critical role in the maintenance and differentiation of stem cells [10]

  • In our investigation of the molecules playing an important role in the maintenance of hair cells (HCs) progenitors in the inner ear, we focused on the MSI and HES genes

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Summary

Introduction

Hair cell loss in the cochlea is caused by ototoxic drugs, aging, and environmental stresses and could potentially lead to devastating pathophysiological effects. MRNA has been prepared from whole acoustic organs or the sensory epithelium, which contains both HCs and SCs, and isolation has been achieved by thermolysin incubation and mechanical separation [6] These methods have several disadvantages; whole organs consist of several cell types (e.g., epithelial HCs and SCs, fibroblasts, endothelial cells, and blood cells from the underlying stroma), and chemical and mechanical stresses applied to the sensory epithelium can trigger cell repair and/ or death signaling [7, 8]. As a result, these methods are not suitable for elucidation of gene expression in normal tissues

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