MANF supports the inner hair cell synapse and the outer hair cell stereocilia bundle in the cochlea

Failure in the structural maintenance of the hair cell stereocilia bundle and ribbon synapse causes hearing loss. Here, we have studied how ER stress elicits hair cell pathology, using mouse models with inactivation of (mesencephalic astrocyte-derived neurotrophic factor), encoding an ER-homeostasis...

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Veröffentlicht in:Life science alliance 2022-02, Vol.5 (2), p.e202101068
Hauptverfasser: Ikäheimo, Kuu, Herranen, Anni, Iivanainen, Vilma, Lankinen, Tuuli, Aarnisalo, Antti A, Sivonen, Ville, Patel, Kashyap A, Demir, Korcan, Saarma, Mart, Lindahl, Maria, Pirvola, Ulla
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Failure in the structural maintenance of the hair cell stereocilia bundle and ribbon synapse causes hearing loss. Here, we have studied how ER stress elicits hair cell pathology, using mouse models with inactivation of (mesencephalic astrocyte-derived neurotrophic factor), encoding an ER-homeostasis-promoting protein. From hearing onset, deficiency caused disarray of the outer hair cell stereocilia bundle and reduced cochlear sound amplification capability throughout the tonotopic axis. In high-frequency outer hair cells, the pathology ended in molecular changes in the stereocilia taper region and in strong stereocilia fusion. In high-frequency inner hair cells, deficiency degraded ribbon synapses. The altered phenotype strongly depended on the mouse genetic background. Altogether, the failure in the ER homeostasis maintenance induced early-onset stereociliopathy and synaptopathy and accelerated the effect of genetic causes driving age-related hearing loss. Correspondingly, mutation in a human patient induced severe sensorineural hearing loss from a young age onward. Thus, we present MANF as a novel protein and ER stress as a mechanism that regulate auditory hair cell maintenance in both mice and humans.
ISSN:2575-1077
2575-1077
DOI:10.26508/lsa.202101068