Connexin-mediated signaling in nonsensory cells is crucial for the development of sensory inner hair cells in the mouse cochlea
Authors
Publication date
4 February 2017
Publisher
'Society for Neuroscience'
Doi
Abstract
open9siMutations in the genes encoding for gap junction proteins connexin 26 (Cx26) and connexin 30 (Cx30) have been linked to syndromic and
nonsyndromic hearing loss in mice and humans. The release of ATP from connexin hemichannels in cochlear nonsensory cells has been
proposed to be the main trigger for action potential activity in immature sensory inner hair cells (IHCs), which is crucial for the
refinement of the developing auditory circuitry. Using connexin knock-out mice, we show that IHCs fire spontaneous action potentials
even in the absence of ATP-dependent intercellular Ca 2 signaling in the nonsensory cells. However, this signaling from nonsensory cells
was able to increase the intrinsic IHC firing frequency. We also found that connexin expression is key to IHC functional maturation. In
Cx26 conditional knock-out mice (Cx26Sox10-Cre), the maturation of IHCs, which normally occurs at approximately postnatal day 12, was
partially prevented. Although Cx30 has been shown not to be required for hearing in young adult mice, IHCs from Cx30 knock-out mice
exhibited a comprehensive brake in their development, such that their basolateral membrane currents and synaptic machinery retain a
prehearing phenotype. We propose that IHC functional differentiation into mature sensory receptors is initiated in the prehearing
cochlea provided that the expression of either connexin reaches a threshold level. As such, connexins regulate one of the most crucial
functional refinements in the mammalian cochlea, the disruption of which contributes to the deafness phenotype observed in mice and
DFNB1 patients.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT
The correct development and function of the mammalian cochlea relies not only on the sensory hair cells, but also on the
surrounding nonsensory cells. Although the nonsensory cells have been largely implicated in the general homeostasis in the
mature cochlea, their involvement in the initial functional differentiation of the sensory inner hair cells is less clear. Using mutant
mouse models for the most common form of congenital deafness in humans, which are knock-outs for the gap-junction channels
connexin 26 and connexin 30 genes, we show that defects in nonsensory cells prevented the functional maturation of inner hair
cells. In connexin knock-outs, inner hair cells remained stuck at a prehearing stage of development and, as such, are unable to
process sound information.openJohnson, Stuart L.; Ceriani, Federico; Houston, Oliver; Polishchuk, Roman; Polishchuk, Elena; Crispino, Giulia; Zorzi, Veronica; Mammano, Fabio; Marcotti, WalterJohnson, Stuart L.; Ceriani, Federico; Houston, Oliver; Polishchuk, Roman; Polishchuk, Elena; Crispino, Giulia; Zorzi, Veronica; Mammano, Fabio; Marcotti, Walte