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- Title
Wnt9a Can Influence Cell Fates and Neural Connectivity across the Radial Axis of the Developing Cochlea.
- Authors
Munnamalai, Vidhya; Sienknecht, Ulrike J.; Duncan, R. Keith; Scott, M. Katie; Thawani, Ankita; Fantetti, Kristen N.; Atallah, Nadia M.; Biesemeier, Deborah J.; Song, Kuhn H.; Luethy, Kirsten; Traub, Eric; Fekete, Donna M.
- Abstract
Vertebrate hearing organs manifest cellular asymmetries across the radial axis that underlie afferent versus efferent circuits between the inner ear and the brain. Therefore, understanding the molecular control of patterning across this axis has important functional implications. Radial axis patterning begins before the cells become postmitotic and is likely linked to the onset of asymmetric expression of secreted factors adjacent to the sensory primordium. This study explores one such asymmetrically expressed gene, Wnt9a, which becomes restricted to the neural edge of the avian auditory organ, the basilar papilla, by embryonic day 5 (E5). Radial patterning is disrupted when Wnt9a is overexpressed throughout the prosensory domain beginning on E3. Sexes were pooled for analysis and sex differences were not studied. Analysis of gene expression and afferent innervation on E6 suggests that ectopic Wnt9a expands the neural-side fate, possibly by re-specifying the abneural fate. RNA sequencing reveals quantitative changes, not only in Wnt-pathway genes, but also in genes involved in axon guidance and cytoskeletal remodeling. By El8, these early patterning effects are manifest as profound changes in cell fates [short hair cells (HCs) are missing], ribbon synapse numbers, outward ionic currents, and efferent innervation. These observations suggest that Wnt9a may be one of the molecules responsible for breaking symmetry across the radial axis of the avian auditory organ. Indirectly, Wnt9a can regulate the mature phenotype whereby afferent axons predominantly innervate neural-side tall HCs, resulting in more ribbon synapses per HC compared with abneural-side short HCs with few ribbons and large efferent synapses.
- Subjects
VERTEBRATE anatomy; CELL determination; MOLECULAR connectivity index; WNT proteins; GENE expression
- Publication
Journal of Neuroscience, 2017, Vol 37, Issue 37, p8975
- ISSN
0270-6474
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1554-17.2017