Inner ear hair cells and supporting cells arise from common precursors and, in mammals, do not show phenotypic conversion. Here, we studied the role of the homeodomain transcription factor Prox1 in the inner ear sensory epithelia. Adenoviral-mediated Prox1 transduction into hair cells in explant cultures led to strong repression of Atoh1 and Gfi1, two transcription factors critical for hair cell differentiation and survival. Luciferase assays showed that Prox1 can repress transcriptional activity of Gfi1 independently of Atoh1. Prox1 transduction into cochlear outer hair cells resulted in degeneration of these cells, consistent with the known phenotype of Gfi1-deficient mice. These results together with the widespread expression of endogenous Prox1 within the population of inner ear supporting cells point to the role for Prox1 in antagonizing the hair cell phenotype in these non-sensory cells. Further, in vivo analyses of hair cells from Gfi1-deficient mice suggest that the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p57(Kip2) mediates the differentiation- and survival-promoting functions of Gfi1. These data reveal novel gene interactions and show that these interactions regulate cellular differentiation within the inner ear sensory epithelia. The data point to the tight regulation of phenotypic characteristics of hair cells and supporting cells.
Sensory hair cells and supporting cells of the mammalian cochlea and vestibular (balance) organs exit the cell cycle during embryogenesis and do not proliferate thereafter. Here, we have studied the mechanisms underlying the maintenance of the postmitotic state and the proliferative capacity of these cells. We provide the first evidence of the role of cyclin D1 in cell cycle regulation in these cells. Cyclin D1 expression disappeared from embryonic hair cells as differentiation started. The expression was transiently upregulated in cochlear hair cells early postnatally, paralleling the spatiotemporal pattern of unscheduled cell cycle re-entry of cochlear hair cells from the p19(Ink4d)/p21(Cip1) compound mutant mice. Cyclin D1 misexpression in vitro in neonatal vestibular HCs from these mutant mice triggered S-phase re-entry. Thus, cyclin D1 suppression is important for hair cell's quiescence, together with the maintained expression of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors. In contrast to hair cells, cyclin D1 expression was maintained in supporting cells when differentiation started. The expression continued during the neonatal period when supporting cells have been shown to re-enter the cell cycle upon stimulation with exogenous mitogens. Thereafter, the steep decline in supporting cell's proliferative activity paralleled with cyclin D1 downregulation. Thus, cyclin D1 critically contributes to the proliferative plasticity of supporting cells. These data suggest that targeted cyclin D1 induction in supporting cells might be an avenue for proliferative regeneration in the inner ear.
Hair cell death is a major cause of hearing impairment. Preservation of surface barrier upon hair cell loss is critical to prevent leakage of potassium-rich endolymph into the organ of Corti and to prevent expansion of cellular damage. Understanding of wound healing in this cytoarchitecturally complex organ requires ultrastructural 3D visualization. Powered by the serial block-face scanning electron microscopy, we penetrate into the cell biological mechanisms in the acute response of outer hair cells and glial-like Deiters' cells to ototoxic trauma in vivo. We show that Deiters' cells function as phagocytes. Upon trauma, their phalangeal processes swell and the resulting close cellular contacts allow engulfment of apoptotic cell debris. Apical domains of dying hair cells are eliminated from the inner ear sensory epithelia, an event thought to depend on supporting cells' actomyosin contractile activity. We show that in the case of apoptotic outer hair cells of the organ of Corti, elimination of their apices is preceded by strong cell body shrinkage, emphasizing the role of the dying cell itself in the cleavage. Our data reveal that the resealing of epithelial surface by junctional extensions of Deiters' cells is dynamically reinforced by newly polymerized F-actin belts. By analyzing Cdc42-inactivated Deiters' cells with defects in actin dynamics and surface closure, we show that compromised barrier integrity shifts hair cell death from apoptosis to necrosis and leads to expanded hair cell and nerve fiber damage. Our results have implications concerning therapeutic protective and regenerative interventions, because both interventions should maintain barrier integrity.
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