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Publication : Hair cells in the inner ear of the pirouette and shaker 2 mutant mice.

First Author  Beyer LA Year  2000
Journal  J Neurocytol Volume  29
Issue  4 Pages  227-40
PubMed ID  11276175 Mgi Jnum  J:94385
Mgi Id  MGI:3512691 Doi  10.1023/a:1026515619443
Citation  Beyer LA, et al. (2000) Hair cells in the inner ear of the pirouette and shaker 2 mutant mice. J Neurocytol 29(4):227-40
abstractText  The shaker 2 (sh2) and pirouette (pi) mouse mutants display severe inner ear dysfunction that involves both auditory and vestibular manifestation. Pathology of the stereocilia of hair cells has been found in both mutants. This study was designed to further our knowledge of the pathological characteristics of the inner ear sensory epithelia in both the sh2 and pi strains. Measurements of auditory brainstem responses indicated that both mutants were profoundly deaf. The morphological assays were specifically designed to characterize a pathological actin bundle that is found in both the inner hair cells and the vestibular hair cells in all five vestibular organs in these two mutants. Using light microscope analysis of phalloidin-stained specimens, these actin bundles could first be detected on postnatal day 3. As the cochleae matured, each inner hair cell and type I vestibular hair cell contained a bundle that spans from the region of the cuticular plate to the basal end of the cell, then extends along with cytoplasm and membrane, towards the basement membrane. Abnormal contact with the basement membrane was found in vestibular hair cells. Based on the shape of the cellular extension and the actin bundle that supports it, we propose to name these extensions 'cytocauds.' The data suggest that the cytocauds in type I vestibular hair cells and inner hair cells are associated with a failure to differentiate and detach from the basement membrane.
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