How to Bury the Dead: Elimination of Apoptotic Hair Cells from the Hearing Organ of the Mouse

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

How to Bury the Dead : Elimination of Apoptotic Hair Cells from the Hearing Organ of the Mouse. / Anttonen, Tommi; Belevich, Ilya; Kirjavainen, Anna; Laos, Maarja; Brakebusch, Cord Herbert; Jokitalo, Eija; Pirvola, Ulla.

In: J A R O, Vol. 15, No. 6, 30.07.2014, p. 975-992.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Anttonen, T, Belevich, I, Kirjavainen, A, Laos, M, Brakebusch, CH, Jokitalo, E & Pirvola, U 2014, 'How to Bury the Dead: Elimination of Apoptotic Hair Cells from the Hearing Organ of the Mouse', J A R O, vol. 15, no. 6, pp. 975-992. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10162-014-0480-x

APA

Anttonen, T., Belevich, I., Kirjavainen, A., Laos, M., Brakebusch, C. H., Jokitalo, E., & Pirvola, U. (2014). How to Bury the Dead: Elimination of Apoptotic Hair Cells from the Hearing Organ of the Mouse. J A R O, 15(6), 975-992. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10162-014-0480-x

Vancouver

Anttonen T, Belevich I, Kirjavainen A, Laos M, Brakebusch CH, Jokitalo E et al. How to Bury the Dead: Elimination of Apoptotic Hair Cells from the Hearing Organ of the Mouse. J A R O. 2014 Jul 30;15(6):975-992. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10162-014-0480-x

Author

Anttonen, Tommi ; Belevich, Ilya ; Kirjavainen, Anna ; Laos, Maarja ; Brakebusch, Cord Herbert ; Jokitalo, Eija ; Pirvola, Ulla. / How to Bury the Dead : Elimination of Apoptotic Hair Cells from the Hearing Organ of the Mouse. In: J A R O. 2014 ; Vol. 15, No. 6. pp. 975-992.

Bibtex

@article{487aefca7e4f48769a6ca179ba30e055,
title = "How to Bury the Dead: Elimination of Apoptotic Hair Cells from the Hearing Organ of the Mouse",
abstract = "Hair cell death is a major cause of hearing impairment. Preservation of surface barrier upon hair cell loss is critical to prevent leakage of potassium-rich endolymph into the organ of Corti and to prevent expansion of cellular damage. Understanding of wound healing in this cytoarchitecturally complex organ requires ultrastructural 3D visualization. Powered by the serial block-face scanning electron microscopy, we penetrate into the cell biological mechanisms in the acute response of outer hair cells and glial-like Deiters' cells to ototoxic trauma in vivo. We show that Deiters' cells function as phagocytes. Upon trauma, their phalangeal processes swell and the resulting close cellular contacts allow engulfment of apoptotic cell debris. Apical domains of dying hair cells are eliminated from the inner ear sensory epithelia, an event thought to depend on supporting cells' actomyosin contractile activity. We show that in the case of apoptotic outer hair cells of the organ of Corti, elimination of their apices is preceded by strong cell body shrinkage, emphasizing the role of the dying cell itself in the cleavage. Our data reveal that the resealing of epithelial surface by junctional extensions of Deiters' cells is dynamically reinforced by newly polymerized F-actin belts. By analyzing Cdc42-inactivated Deiters' cells with defects in actin dynamics and surface closure, we show that compromised barrier integrity shifts hair cell death from apoptosis to necrosis and leads to expanded hair cell and nerve fiber damage. Our results have implications concerning therapeutic protective and regenerative interventions, because both interventions should maintain barrier integrity.",
author = "Tommi Anttonen and Ilya Belevich and Anna Kirjavainen and Maarja Laos and Brakebusch, {Cord Herbert} and Eija Jokitalo and Ulla Pirvola",
year = "2014",
month = jul,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1007/s10162-014-0480-x",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "975--992",
journal = "JARO - Journal of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology",
issn = "1525-3961",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - How to Bury the Dead

T2 - Elimination of Apoptotic Hair Cells from the Hearing Organ of the Mouse

AU - Anttonen, Tommi

AU - Belevich, Ilya

AU - Kirjavainen, Anna

AU - Laos, Maarja

AU - Brakebusch, Cord Herbert

AU - Jokitalo, Eija

AU - Pirvola, Ulla

PY - 2014/7/30

Y1 - 2014/7/30

N2 - Hair cell death is a major cause of hearing impairment. Preservation of surface barrier upon hair cell loss is critical to prevent leakage of potassium-rich endolymph into the organ of Corti and to prevent expansion of cellular damage. Understanding of wound healing in this cytoarchitecturally complex organ requires ultrastructural 3D visualization. Powered by the serial block-face scanning electron microscopy, we penetrate into the cell biological mechanisms in the acute response of outer hair cells and glial-like Deiters' cells to ototoxic trauma in vivo. We show that Deiters' cells function as phagocytes. Upon trauma, their phalangeal processes swell and the resulting close cellular contacts allow engulfment of apoptotic cell debris. Apical domains of dying hair cells are eliminated from the inner ear sensory epithelia, an event thought to depend on supporting cells' actomyosin contractile activity. We show that in the case of apoptotic outer hair cells of the organ of Corti, elimination of their apices is preceded by strong cell body shrinkage, emphasizing the role of the dying cell itself in the cleavage. Our data reveal that the resealing of epithelial surface by junctional extensions of Deiters' cells is dynamically reinforced by newly polymerized F-actin belts. By analyzing Cdc42-inactivated Deiters' cells with defects in actin dynamics and surface closure, we show that compromised barrier integrity shifts hair cell death from apoptosis to necrosis and leads to expanded hair cell and nerve fiber damage. Our results have implications concerning therapeutic protective and regenerative interventions, because both interventions should maintain barrier integrity.

AB - Hair cell death is a major cause of hearing impairment. Preservation of surface barrier upon hair cell loss is critical to prevent leakage of potassium-rich endolymph into the organ of Corti and to prevent expansion of cellular damage. Understanding of wound healing in this cytoarchitecturally complex organ requires ultrastructural 3D visualization. Powered by the serial block-face scanning electron microscopy, we penetrate into the cell biological mechanisms in the acute response of outer hair cells and glial-like Deiters' cells to ototoxic trauma in vivo. We show that Deiters' cells function as phagocytes. Upon trauma, their phalangeal processes swell and the resulting close cellular contacts allow engulfment of apoptotic cell debris. Apical domains of dying hair cells are eliminated from the inner ear sensory epithelia, an event thought to depend on supporting cells' actomyosin contractile activity. We show that in the case of apoptotic outer hair cells of the organ of Corti, elimination of their apices is preceded by strong cell body shrinkage, emphasizing the role of the dying cell itself in the cleavage. Our data reveal that the resealing of epithelial surface by junctional extensions of Deiters' cells is dynamically reinforced by newly polymerized F-actin belts. By analyzing Cdc42-inactivated Deiters' cells with defects in actin dynamics and surface closure, we show that compromised barrier integrity shifts hair cell death from apoptosis to necrosis and leads to expanded hair cell and nerve fiber damage. Our results have implications concerning therapeutic protective and regenerative interventions, because both interventions should maintain barrier integrity.

U2 - 10.1007/s10162-014-0480-x

DO - 10.1007/s10162-014-0480-x

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25074370

VL - 15

SP - 975

EP - 992

JO - JARO - Journal of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology

JF - JARO - Journal of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology

SN - 1525-3961

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 119990256