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TRIOBP-5 sculpts stereocilia rootlets and stiffens supporting cells enabling hearing
Tatsuya Katsuno, … , Thomas B. Friedman, Shin-ichiro Kitajiri
Tatsuya Katsuno, … , Thomas B. Friedman, Shin-ichiro Kitajiri
Published June 20, 2019
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2019;4(12):e128561. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.128561.
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Research Article Neuroscience

TRIOBP-5 sculpts stereocilia rootlets and stiffens supporting cells enabling hearing

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Abstract

TRIOBP remodels the cytoskeleton by forming unusually dense F-actin bundles and is implicated in human cancer, schizophrenia, and deafness. Mutations ablating human and mouse TRIOBP-4 and TRIOBP-5 isoforms are associated with profound deafness, as inner ear mechanosensory hair cells degenerate after stereocilia rootlets fail to develop. However, the mechanisms regulating formation of stereocilia rootlets by each TRIOBP isoform remain unknown. Using 3 new Triobp mouse models, we report that TRIOBP-5 is essential for thickening bundles of F-actin in rootlets, establishing their mature dimensions and for stiffening supporting cells of the auditory sensory epithelium. The coiled-coil domains of this isoform are required for reinforcement and maintenance of stereocilia rootlets. A loss of TRIOBP-5 in mouse results in dysmorphic rootlets that are abnormally thin in the cuticular plate but have increased widths and lengths within stereocilia cores, and causes progressive deafness recapitulating the human phenotype. Our study extends the current understanding of TRIOBP isoform–specific functions necessary for life-long hearing, with implications for insight into other TRIOBPopathies.

Authors

Tatsuya Katsuno, Inna A. Belyantseva, Alexander X. Cartagena-Rivera, Keisuke Ohta, Shawn M. Crump, Ronald S. Petralia, Kazuya Ono, Risa Tona, Ayesha Imtiaz, Atteeq Rehman, Hiroshi Kiyonari, Mari Kaneko, Ya-Xian Wang, Takaya Abe, Makoto Ikeya, Cristina Fenollar-Ferrer, Gavin P. Riordan, Elisabeth A. Wilson, Tracy S. Fitzgerald, Kohei Segawa, Koichi Omori, Juichi Ito, Gregory I. Frolenkov, Thomas B. Friedman, Shin-ichiro Kitajiri

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Figure 9

Illustration of TRIOBP-4 and TRIOBP-5 distribution in inner ear supporting cells and working model of stereocilia pathology in TRIOBP-5–deficient mice.

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Illustration of TRIOBP-4 and TRIOBP-5 distribution in inner ear supporti...
(A) TRIOBP-4 and TRIOBP-5 are both present in Deiters’ (DC1, DC2, and DC3) and outer and inner pillar cells (OPC, IPC) of normal-hearing TriobpΔEx9-10/+ heterozygotes. Only TRIOBP-4 remains in the same cell types of deaf TriobpΔEx9-10/ΔEx9-10 mouse. (B) Schematic of wild-type stereocilia with normal rootlet architecture (left). TRIOBP-5–deficient stereocilia with abnormally thin rootlets in the cuticular plate (right) but abnormally thick rootlets in the F-actin core that extend aberrantly to tips of stereocilia (right). TRIOBP-5 (purple) and TRIOBP-4 (blue) wrap around rootlet F-actin (insets) and in wild-type are hypothesized to allow filaments to slide past one another during sound-induced stereocilia deflections. TRIOBP-5 recruits more F-actin to shape rootlets and generates thicker bundles due to oligomerization by its coiled-coil domains.

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