The 133-kDa N-terminal domain enables myosin 15 to maintain mechanotransducing stereocilia and is essential for hearing
inner ear
Mice, Knockout
QH301-705.5
Science
Q
R
myosin
Cell Biology
Myosins
Stereocilia
Mice
Protein Transport
Hearing
hearing
deafness
Ear, Inner
Hair Cells, Auditory
Medicine
Animals
Protein Isoforms
Biology (General)
actin
stereocilia
Protein Binding
DOI:
10.7554/elife.08627
Publication Date:
2015-08-24T11:47:09Z
AUTHORS (10)
ABSTRACT
The precise assembly of inner ear hair cell stereocilia into rows of increasing height is critical for mechanotransduction and the sense of hearing. Yet, how the lengths of actin-based stereocilia are regulated remains poorly understood. Mutations of the molecular motor myosin 15 stunt stereocilia growth and cause deafness. We found that hair cells express two isoforms of myosin 15 that differ by inclusion of an 133-kDa N-terminal domain, and that these isoforms can selectively traffic to different stereocilia rows. Using an isoform-specific knockout mouse, we show that hair cells expressing only the small isoform remarkably develop normal stereocilia bundles. However, a critical subset of stereocilia with active mechanotransducer channels subsequently retracts. The larger isoform with the 133-kDa N-terminal domain traffics to these specialized stereocilia and prevents disassembly of their actin core. Our results show that myosin 15 isoforms can navigate between functionally distinct classes of stereocilia, and are independently required to assemble and then maintain the intricate hair bundle architecture.
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