Record Details

Otoferlin Deficiency In Zebrafish Results In Defects In Balance And Hearing: Rescue Of The Balance And Hearing Phenotype With Full-length And Truncated Forms Of Mouse Otoferlin

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Otoferlin Deficiency In Zebrafish Results In Defects In Balance And Hearing: Rescue Of The Balance And Hearing Phenotype With Full-length And Truncated Forms Of Mouse Otoferlin
Names Chatterjee, Paroma (creator)
Padmanarayana, Murugesh (creator)
Abdullah, Nazish (creator)
Holman, Chelsea L. (creator)
LaDu, Jane (creator)
Tanguay, Robert L. (creator)
Johnson, Colin P. (creator)
Date Issued 2015-01 (iso8601)
Note This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published article is copyrighted by the American Society for Microbiology and can be found at: http://mcb.asm.org/.
Abstract Sensory hair cells convert mechanical motion into chemical signals. Otoferlin, a six-C2 domain transmembrane protein linked to deafness in humans, is hypothesized to play a
role in exocytosis at hair cell ribbon synapses. To date however, otoferlin has been
studied almost exclusively in mouse models, and no rescue experiments have been
reported. Here we describe the phenotype associated with morpholino induced otoferlin
knockdown in zebrafish, and report the results of rescue experiments conducted with
full length and truncated forms of otoferlin. We find that expression of otoferlin occurs
early in development, and is restricted to hair cells and the midbrain.
Immunofluorescence microscopy reveals localization to both apical and basolateral
regions of hair cells. Knockdown of otoferlin results in hearing and balance defects, as
well as locomotion deficiencies. Further, otoferlin morphants had uninflated swim
bladders. Rescue experiments conducted with mouse otoferlin restored hearing,
balance and inflation of the swim bladder. Remarkably, truncated forms of otoferlin
retaining the C-terminal C2F domain also rescued the otoferlin knockdown phenotype,
while the individual N-terminal C2A domain did not. We conclude that otoferlin plays an
evolutionarily conserved role in vertebrate hearing, and that truncated forms of otoferlin
can rescue hearing and balance.
Genre Article
Identifier Chatterjee, P., Padmanarayana, M., Abdullah, N., Holman, C. L., LaDu, J., Tanguay, R. L., & Johnson, C. P. (2015). Otoferlin Deficiency In Zebrafish Results In Defects In Balance And Hearing: Rescue Of The Balance And Hearing Phenotype With Full-length And Truncated Forms Of Mouse Otoferlin. Molecular and Cellular Biology, MCB.01439-14. doi:10.1128/MCB.01439-14

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