Sensory hair cells of the inner ear detect sound stimuli, inertial or gravitational forces. These cause deflection of the cell stereociliary bundle and activate a small number of cation-selective mechano-transduction (MET) channels that admit K+ and Ca2+ ions into the cytoplasm. Stereociliary Ca2+ levels are homeostatically regulated by an unusual splicing isoform (w/a) of plasma-membrane calcium-pump isoform 2 (PMCA2w/a), ablation or missense mutations of which cause deafness and loss of balance in humans and mice. At variance with other PMCA2 isoforms, PMCA2w/a expressed in CHO transfectants increases only marginally its activity in response to a rapid increase of the cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]c). In this expression system, deafness-related mutations of PMCA2w/a decrease the pump ability to extrude Ca2+ both at steady-state and in response to a [Ca2+]c rise. Consistent with these findings, mouse strains in which the pump is genetically ablated or mutated show hearing impairment correlated with defects in homeostatic regulation of stereociliary Ca2+, decreased sensitivity of the MET channels to hair bundle displacement and morphological abnormalities in the organ of Corti. These results highlight a critical role played by PMCA2w/a in the control of hair cell function and survival and provide mechanistic insight into the etiology of deafness and vestibular disorders.

PMCA2w/a Splice Variant: A Key Regulator of Hair Cell Mechano-transduction Machinery

Bortolozzi Mario;Mammano Fabio
2016

Abstract

Sensory hair cells of the inner ear detect sound stimuli, inertial or gravitational forces. These cause deflection of the cell stereociliary bundle and activate a small number of cation-selective mechano-transduction (MET) channels that admit K+ and Ca2+ ions into the cytoplasm. Stereociliary Ca2+ levels are homeostatically regulated by an unusual splicing isoform (w/a) of plasma-membrane calcium-pump isoform 2 (PMCA2w/a), ablation or missense mutations of which cause deafness and loss of balance in humans and mice. At variance with other PMCA2 isoforms, PMCA2w/a expressed in CHO transfectants increases only marginally its activity in response to a rapid increase of the cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]c). In this expression system, deafness-related mutations of PMCA2w/a decrease the pump ability to extrude Ca2+ both at steady-state and in response to a [Ca2+]c rise. Consistent with these findings, mouse strains in which the pump is genetically ablated or mutated show hearing impairment correlated with defects in homeostatic regulation of stereociliary Ca2+, decreased sensitivity of the MET channels to hair bundle displacement and morphological abnormalities in the organ of Corti. These results highlight a critical role played by PMCA2w/a in the control of hair cell function and survival and provide mechanistic insight into the etiology of deafness and vestibular disorders.
2016
Istituto di Biologia Cellulare e Neurobiologia - IBCN - Sede Monterotondo Scalo
Istituto di Biochimica e Biologia Cellulare - IBBC
Inglese
S. Chakraborti, N.S. Dhalla
Advances in Biochemistry in Health and Disease - Regulation of Ca2+-ATPases, V-ATPases and F-ATPases
27
45
18
978-3-319-24778-6
http://www.springer.com/us/book/9783319247786
Springer
Cham Heidelberg New York Dordrecht London
SVIZZERA
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Ca2+-ATPases; Sensory hair cells; inner ear; organ of Corti; vestibular system; hereditary deafness; cadherins.
Invited contribution. The work summarized here was carried out by the authors' team in collaboration with research teams led by Ernesto Carafoli, Marisa Brini, Paolo Gasparini, Karen Steel, Steve Brown and the late Edoardo Arslan. For grant support see Refs. [44, 45, 64].
2
02 Contributo in Volume::02.01 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
268
none
Bortolozzi Mario; Mammano Fabio
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
   Development of mouse mutant resources for functional analyses of human diseases - Enhancing the translation of research into innovation
   INFRAFRONTIER-I3
   FP7
   312325
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/309361
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 0
social impact