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Publication : Connexin30 deficiency causes instrastrial fluid-blood barrier disruption within the cochlear stria vascularis.

First Author  Cohen-Salmon M Year  2007
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  104
Issue  15 Pages  6229-34
PubMed ID  17400755 Mgi Jnum  J:120823
Mgi Id  MGI:3708050 Doi  10.1073/pnas.0605108104
Citation  Cohen-Salmon M, et al. (2007) Connexin30 deficiency causes instrastrial fluid-blood barrier disruption within the cochlear stria vascularis. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104(15):6229-6234
abstractText  The endocochlear potential (EP) is essential to hearing, because it provides approximately half of the driving force for the mechanoelectrical transduction current in auditory hair cells. The EP is produced by the stria vascularis (SV), a vascularized bilayer epithelium of the cochlea lateral wall. The absence of the gap junction protein connexin30 (Cx30) in Cx30(-/-) mice results in the SV failure to produce an EP, which mainly accounts for the severe congenital hearing impairment of these mice. Here, we show that the SV components of the EP electrogenic machinery and the epithelial barriers limiting the intrastrial fluid space, which are both necessary for the EP production, were preserved in Cx30(-/-) mice. In contrast, the endothelial barrier of the capillaries supplying the SV was disrupted before EP onset. This disruption is expected to result in an intrastrial electric shunt that is sufficient to account for the absence of the EP production. Immunofluorescence analysis of wild-type mice detected Cx30 in the basal and intermediate cells of the SV but not in the endothelial cells of the SV capillaries. Moreover, dye-coupling experiments showed that endothelial cells were not coupled to the SV basal, intermediate, and marginal cells. SV transcriptome analysis revealed a significant down-regulation of betaine homocysteine S-methyltransferase (Bhmt) in the Cx30(-/-) mice, which was restricted to the SV and resulted in a local increase in homocysteine, a known factor of endothelial dysfunction. Disruption of the SV endothelial barrier is a previously undescribed pathogenic process underlying hearing impairment.
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