Varying mechanical forces drive sensory epithelium formation

The mechanical cues of the external microenvironment have been recognized as essential clues driving cell behavior. Although intracellular signals modulating cell fate during sensory epithelium development is well understood, the driving force of sensory epithelium formation remains elusive. Here, w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science advances 2023-11, Vol.9 (44), p.eadf2664-eadf2664
Hauptverfasser: Xia, Mingyu, Wu, Mingxuan, Li, Yuanrong, Liu, Yaoqian, Jia, Gaogan, Lou, Yiyun, Ma, Jiaoyao, Gao, Qing, Xie, Mingjun, Chen, Yuewei, He, Yong, Li, Huawei, Li, Wenyan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The mechanical cues of the external microenvironment have been recognized as essential clues driving cell behavior. Although intracellular signals modulating cell fate during sensory epithelium development is well understood, the driving force of sensory epithelium formation remains elusive. Here, we manufactured a hybrid hydrogel with tunable mechanical properties for the cochlear organoids culture and revealed that the extracellular matrix (ECM) drives sensory epithelium formation through shifting stiffness in a stage-dependent pattern. As the driving force, moderate ECM stiffness activated the expansion of cochlear progenitor cell (CPC)–derived epithelial organoids by modulating the integrin α3 (ITGA3)/F-actin cytoskeleton/YAP signaling. Higher stiffness induced the transition of CPCs into sensory hair cells (HCs) through increasing the intracellular Ca 2+ signaling mediated by PIEZO2 and then activating KLF2 to accomplish the cell specification . Our results identify the molecular mechanism of sensory epithelium formation guided by ECM mechanical force and contribute to developing therapeutic approaches for HC regeneration. ECM stiffness serves as the driving force of inner ear sensory epithelium formation in a stage-dependent manner.
ISSN:2375-2548
2375-2548
DOI:10.1126/sciadv.adf2664