Large scale gene expression profiles of regenerating inner ear sensory epithelia.

Loss of inner ear sensory hair cells (HC) is a leading cause of human hearing loss and balance disorders. Unlike mammals, many lower vertebrates can regenerate these cells. We used cross-species microarrays to examine this process in the avian inner ear. Specifically, changes in expression of over 1...

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Main Authors: R David Hawkins, Stavros Bashiardes, Kara E Powder, Samin A Sajan, Veena Bhonagiri, David M Alvarado, Judith Speck, Mark E Warchol, Michael Lovett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2007-06-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1888727?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-c6f39d60eac74b3883722a932ff59fec2020-11-25T02:15:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032007-06-0126e52510.1371/journal.pone.0000525Large scale gene expression profiles of regenerating inner ear sensory epithelia.R David HawkinsStavros BashiardesKara E PowderSamin A SajanVeena BhonagiriDavid M AlvaradoJudith SpeckMark E WarcholMichael LovettLoss of inner ear sensory hair cells (HC) is a leading cause of human hearing loss and balance disorders. Unlike mammals, many lower vertebrates can regenerate these cells. We used cross-species microarrays to examine this process in the avian inner ear. Specifically, changes in expression of over 1700 transcription factor (TF) genes were investigated in hair cells of auditory and vestibular organs following treatment with two different damaging agents and regeneration in vitro. Multiple components of seven distinct known signaling pathways were clearly identifiable: TGFbeta, PAX, NOTCH, WNT, NFKappaB, INSULIN/IGF1 and AP1. Numerous components of apoptotic and cell cycle control pathways were differentially expressed, including p27(KIP) and TFs that regulate its expression. A comparison of expression trends across tissues and treatments revealed identical patterns of expression that occurred at identical times during regenerative proliferation. Network analysis of the patterns of gene expression in this large dataset also revealed the additional presence of many components (and possible network interactions) of estrogen receptor signaling, circadian rhythm genes and parts of the polycomb complex (among others). Equal numbers of differentially expressed genes were identified that have not yet been placed into any known pathway. Specific time points and tissues also exhibited interesting differences: For example, 45 zinc finger genes were specifically up-regulated at later stages of cochlear regeneration. These results are the first of their kind and should provide the starting point for more detailed investigations of the role of these many pathways in HC recovery, and for a description of their possible interactions.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1888727?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R David Hawkins
Stavros Bashiardes
Kara E Powder
Samin A Sajan
Veena Bhonagiri
David M Alvarado
Judith Speck
Mark E Warchol
Michael Lovett
spellingShingle R David Hawkins
Stavros Bashiardes
Kara E Powder
Samin A Sajan
Veena Bhonagiri
David M Alvarado
Judith Speck
Mark E Warchol
Michael Lovett
Large scale gene expression profiles of regenerating inner ear sensory epithelia.
PLoS ONE
author_facet R David Hawkins
Stavros Bashiardes
Kara E Powder
Samin A Sajan
Veena Bhonagiri
David M Alvarado
Judith Speck
Mark E Warchol
Michael Lovett
author_sort R David Hawkins
title Large scale gene expression profiles of regenerating inner ear sensory epithelia.
title_short Large scale gene expression profiles of regenerating inner ear sensory epithelia.
title_full Large scale gene expression profiles of regenerating inner ear sensory epithelia.
title_fullStr Large scale gene expression profiles of regenerating inner ear sensory epithelia.
title_full_unstemmed Large scale gene expression profiles of regenerating inner ear sensory epithelia.
title_sort large scale gene expression profiles of regenerating inner ear sensory epithelia.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2007-06-01
description Loss of inner ear sensory hair cells (HC) is a leading cause of human hearing loss and balance disorders. Unlike mammals, many lower vertebrates can regenerate these cells. We used cross-species microarrays to examine this process in the avian inner ear. Specifically, changes in expression of over 1700 transcription factor (TF) genes were investigated in hair cells of auditory and vestibular organs following treatment with two different damaging agents and regeneration in vitro. Multiple components of seven distinct known signaling pathways were clearly identifiable: TGFbeta, PAX, NOTCH, WNT, NFKappaB, INSULIN/IGF1 and AP1. Numerous components of apoptotic and cell cycle control pathways were differentially expressed, including p27(KIP) and TFs that regulate its expression. A comparison of expression trends across tissues and treatments revealed identical patterns of expression that occurred at identical times during regenerative proliferation. Network analysis of the patterns of gene expression in this large dataset also revealed the additional presence of many components (and possible network interactions) of estrogen receptor signaling, circadian rhythm genes and parts of the polycomb complex (among others). Equal numbers of differentially expressed genes were identified that have not yet been placed into any known pathway. Specific time points and tissues also exhibited interesting differences: For example, 45 zinc finger genes were specifically up-regulated at later stages of cochlear regeneration. These results are the first of their kind and should provide the starting point for more detailed investigations of the role of these many pathways in HC recovery, and for a description of their possible interactions.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1888727?pdf=render
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