Protein Tied to Usher Syndrome May Be Hearing's "Missing
Link"
Editor: Scientists continue to work out exactly how it is we hear.
Clearly the better we understand this, the more likely we'll be able to find
a hearing loss "cure". This article from "Inside, the NIDCD Newsletter"
discusses what may be a significant discovery in the search for a cure.
"Inside" is published by the National Institute on Deafness and Other
Communicative Disorders (NIDCD). The material in not copyrighted, and
republication is encouraged!
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A protein associated with a disorder that causes deafness and blindness
in people may be a key to unraveling one of the foremost mysteries of how we
hear, reports a study in the June 28 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience.
Scientists with NIDCD and the University of Sussex, Brighton, United
Kingdom, have identified protocadherin-15 as a likely player in the
moment-of-truth reaction in which sound is converted into electrical
signals. (Protocadherin-15 is a protein made by a gene that causes one form
of type 1 Usher syndrome, the most common cause of deaf-blindness in
humans.) The findings not only will provide insight into how hearing takes
place at the molecular level, but also may help us figure out why some
people temporarily lose their hearing after being exposed to loud noise,
only to regain it a day or two later.
"These findings offer a more precise picture of the complicated processes
involved with our sense of hearing," says Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D., director
of the National Institutes of Health. "With roughly 15 percent of American
adults reporting some degree of hearing loss, it is increasingly vital that
we continue making inroads into our understanding of these processes,
helping us seek new and better treatments, and opening the doors to better
hearing health for Americans."
Tapping Your Inner "Tip Link"
Researchers have long known that hair cells - small sensory cells in the
inner ear- convert sound energy into electrical signals that travel to the
brain through a process called mechanotransduction. However, the closer one
zooms in on the structures involved, the murkier our understanding becomes.
When fluid in the inner ear is set into motion by vibrations emanating from
the bones of the middle ear, the rippling effect causes bristly structures
atop the hair cells to bump up against an overlying membrane and to deflect.
Like seats in a three-row stadium, the bristles, called stereocilia, are
arranged in tiers, with each lower seat connected to a higher seat by
minute, threadlike bridges, or links. As the stereocilia are deflected,
pore-like channels on the surface of the stereocilia open up, allowing
potassium to rush in, and generating an electrical signal. Because the "tip
link" - the link that connects the tip of the shorter stereocilium to the
side of the adjacent, taller stereocilium - must be present for the channel
to function, scientists believe that this structure may be responsible for
opening and closing the channel gate. Researchers suggest that if they can
learn the makeup of the tip link, they'll be that much closer to
understanding how the gate mechanism operates.
"This research identifies protocadherin-15 to be one of the proteins
associated with the tip link, thus finally answering a question that has
been baffling researchers for years," says James F. Battey, Jr., M.D.,
Ph.D., director of NIDCD. "Thanks to the collaborative effort among these
researchers, we are now at the closest point we have ever been to
understanding the mechanism by which the ear converts mechanical energy - or
energy of motion - into a form of energy that the brain can recognize as
sound."
NIDCD's Zubair M. Ahmed, Ph.D., and Thomas B. Friedman, Ph.D., together
with the University of Sussex's Richard Goodyear, Ph.D., and Guy P.
Richardson, Ph.D., and others used several lines of evidence to identify a
protein that Drs. Goodyear and Richardson had found earlier to comprise tip
links in the inner ears of young chicks. The protein is referred to as the
"tip-link antigen" (TLA) because it induces the production of special
antibodies, which bind to the protein at the stereocilia tips.
Using mass spectrometry, a laboratory technique that breaks down a
substance into its individual components, the researchers analyzed the
makeup of the TLA and found two peptide sequences that match up to key
segments of the protein protocadherin-15 in humans, mice, and chickens,
suggesting that the two proteins are comparable evolutionarily. Additional
experiments using western blot analysis, a technique that identifies
individual proteins in a substance by separating them from one another by
mass and testing how they react to certain antibodies, demonstrated that the
antibody that recognizes protocadherin-15 in mice also binds to the TLA.
The team also analyzed the amino acid sequences of protocadherin-15 and
discovered four distinct forms - three of which are present in various
developmental stages of the mouse inner ear. The researchers refer to the
three alternative forms found in the inner ear as CD1, CD2, and CD3 because
the sequential variations occur in the protein's "cytoplasmic domain" - a
stretch of amino acids anchored inside the stereocilium. (The fourth form,
referred to as SI, is likely to be secreted.) With the help of two imaging
techniques that use antibodies to label a targeted protein, the team found
that the distribution of protocadherin-15 along the stereocilium varies by
form. The CD3 form is stationed only at the tips of the stereocilia in
mature hair cells, while the CD1 form is found along the lengths of the
stereocilia in mature cells but not at the tips. In contrast, the CD2 form
is expressed along the lengths of stereocilia during hair cell development,
but is not present in mature hair cells.
Finally, the team found that a chemical known to break tip links - called
BAPTA - had no effect on the CD1 and CD2 forms of protocadherin-15 but
destroyed the CD3 form. Likewise, just as tip links are known to reappear
roughly four hours after the chemical is removed, the CD3 form returned
within four to 24 hours upon removal of the chemical.
Based on these findings, the researchers conclude that protocadherin-15
now can be identified as the tip-link antigen and that it is distributed in
a specific way in relation to the tip-link complex. They propose that the
CD3 form of protocadherin-15, located at the tip of the shorter stereocilium,
may link directly or indirectly to the CD1 form on the adjacent, taller
stereocilium. This scenario could help explain how tip links that are broken
in real-life situations, such as from excessive exposure to loud noise,
could cause temporary hearing loss until the link re-establishes itself and
hearing is restored.
In future studies, the scientists plan to delve more deeply into the role
that protocadherin-15 plays in the tip-link complex and whether it interacts
with other components in the formation of the tip link. They also hope to
determine how tip links can be stimulated to re-form, once broken.
The work was supported by NIDCD and The Wellcome Trust, London, UK. Other
researchers on the project represent NIH's National Human Genome Research
Institute, Bethesda, MD; University of Cambridge, UK; Brigham Young
University, Provo, UT; the National Centre of Excellence in Molecular
Biology, Lahore, Pakistan; and the University of Kentucky, Lexington.