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Publication : Length regulation of mechanosensitive stereocilia depends on very slow actin dynamics and filament-severing proteins.

First Author  Narayanan P Year  2015
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  6
Pages  6855 PubMed ID  25897778
Mgi Jnum  J:222694 Mgi Id  MGI:5645397
Doi  10.1038/ncomms7855 Citation  Narayanan P, et al. (2015) Length regulation of mechanosensitive stereocilia depends on very slow actin dynamics and filament-severing proteins. Nat Commun 6:6855
abstractText  Auditory sensory hair cells depend on stereocilia with precisely regulated lengths to detect sound. Since stereocilia are primarily composed of crosslinked, parallel actin filaments, regulated actin dynamics are essential for controlling stereocilia length. Here we assessed stereocilia actin turnover by monitoring incorporation of inducibly expressed beta-actin-GFP in adult mouse hair cells in vivo and by directly measuring beta-actin-GFP turnover in explants. Stereocilia actin incorporation is remarkably slow and restricted to filament barbed ends in a small tip compartment, with minimal accumulation in the rest of the actin core. Shorter rows of stereocilia, which have mechanically gated ion channels, show more variable actin turnover than the tallest stereocilia, which lack channels. Finally, the proteins ADF and AIP1, which both mediate actin filament severing, contribute to stereocilia length maintenance. Altogether, the data support a model whereby stereocilia actin cores are largely static, with dynamic regulation at the tips to maintain a critical length.
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