Inner Ear Hair Cell Tip Links
Revealed
WASHINGTON, DC—Our ability to hear is made
possible by way of a Rube Goldberg-style process in which sound vibrations
entering the ear shake and jostle a successive chain of structures until, lo
and behold, they are converted into electrical signals that can be interpreted
by the brain. Exactly how the electrical signal is generated has been the
subject of ongoing research interest.
In a study published in the September 6 issue of the journal Nature,
researchers have shed new light on the hearing process by identifying two key
proteins that join together at the precise location where energy of motion is
turned into electrical impulses. The discovery, described by some scientists
as one of the holy grails of the field, was made by researchers at the
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD), one
of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the Scripps Research Institute
in La Jolla, Calif.
“This team has helped solve one of the lingering mysteries of the field,” says
James F. Battey, Jr, MD, PhD, director of the NIDCD. “The better we understand
the pivotal point at which a person is able to discern sound, the closer we
are to developing more precise therapies for treating people with hearing
loss, a condition that affects roughly 32.5 million people in the United
States alone.”
When a noise occurs, such as a car honking or a person laughing, sound
vibrations entering the ear first bounce against the eardrum, causing it to
vibrate. This, in turn, causes three bones in the middle ear to vibrate,
amplifying the sound. Vibrations from the middle ear set fluid in the inner
ear, or cochlea, into motion and a traveling wave to form along a membrane
running down its length. Sensory cells (called hair cells) sitting atop the
membrane “ride the wave” and in doing so, bump up against an overlying
membrane. When this happens, bristly structures protruding from their tops
(called stereocilia) deflect, or tilt, to one side. The tilting of the
stereocilia cause pore-sized channels to open up, ions to rush in, and an
electrical signal to be generated that travels to the brain, a process called
mechanoelectrical transduction.
Most scientists believe that the channel gates are opened and closed by
microscopic bridges—called “tip links”—that connect shorter stereocilia to
taller ones positioned behind them. If scientists could determine what the tip
links are made of, they’d be one step closer to understanding what causes the
channel gates to open. This is no easy feat, however, because stereocilia are
extremely small, scarce, and difficult to handle. Several proteins had been
reported to occur at the tip link in earlier studies, but results have been
conflicting to this point.Cadherin
23 and Protocadherin 15 Unite to Form Tip Link
Using three lines of evidence, NIDCD scientists Hirofumi Sakaguchi, MD, PhD,
Joshua Tokita, and Bechara Kachar, MD, together with Piotr Kazmierczak and
Ulrich Müller, PhD, of Scripps Research Institute, and other collaborators
have demonstrated that two proteins associated with hearing loss—cadherin 23
(CDH23) and protocadherin 15 (PCDH15)—unite and adhere to one another to form
the tip link. Mutations in CDH23 are known to cause one form of Usher syndrome
as well as a nonsyndromic recessive form of deafness, and mutations in PCDH15
are responsible for another form of Usher syndrome. Usher syndrome is the most
common cause of deaf-blindness in humans.
“Cadherin 23 and protocadherin 15 have been implicated in a variety of forms
of late- and early-onset deafness, and a whole range of mutations can produce
different outcomes,” says NIDCD’s Kachar, a co-senior investigator on the
study. “Now that we know how these two proteins interact at the tip link, we
can perhaps predict how different types of hearing loss can take place
depending on where a mutation is located.”
Three Lines of Evidence
The researchers first created antibodies that would bind to and label short
segments on the CDH23 and PCDH15 proteins in the inner ears of rats and guinea
pigs. (Both proteins were identified at the tip link, respectively, in earlier
studies.) Using green fluorescence and electron microscopy studies, they
showed that CDH23 was located on the side of the taller stereocilium and
PCDH15 was present on the tip of the shorter one, with their loose ends
overlapping in between. The researchers were able to identify both proteins,
while earlier studies had not, because they removed an obstacle to the
antibody-binding process: calcium. Under normal conditions, CDH23 and PCDH15
are studded with calcium ions, which prevent antibodies from binding to the
targeted sites. When calcium was removed through the addition of a chemical
known as BAPTA, both labels became visible.
Next, the researchers built a structure resembling a tip link by expressing
the CDH23 and PCDH15 proteins in the laboratory and watching how they
interacted. When conditions were right, the two proteins wound themselves
tightly together from one end to the other in a configuration that mirrored a
naturally occurring tip link. The results were surprising, since the
scientific consensus had been that these proteins would not interact at all.
As with normal tip links, the structure thrived in calcium concentrations that
paralleled those found in fluid of the inner ear, while a drastic reduction in
calcium disrupted the structure.
Lastly, the scientists found that one mutation of PCDH15 that causes one form
of deafness inhibited the interaction of the two proteins, leading them to
conclude that the mutation reduces the adhesive properties of the two proteins
and prevents the formation of the tip link. In a second mutation of PCDH15,
the tip link was not destroyed; the scientists suggested that the deafness is
not likely caused by the breakup of the tip link but by interference with its
mechanical properties.
Knowing precisely the composition and configuration of the tip link,
scientists can now explore how these proteins interact with other components
to form the rest of the transduction machinery. In addition, scientists can
study how new treatments might be developed to address the breaking up of tip
links through environmental factors, such as loud noise.
“Now that we understand what the tip link is made of and what conditions are
required to assemble it,” says Kachar, “we can study what it might take to
rejoin tip links as a possible method for restoring hearing in people with
some forms of hearing loss that may have resulted from disruption of the tip
link.”
SOURCE: NIDCD
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