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Publication : The release of surface-anchored α-tectorin, an apical extracellular matrix protein, mediates tectorial membrane organization.

First Author  Kim DK Year  2019
Journal  Sci Adv Volume  5
Issue  11 Pages  eaay6300
PubMed ID  31807709 Mgi Jnum  J:289962
Mgi Id  MGI:6435253 Doi  10.1126/sciadv.aay6300
Citation  Kim DK, et al. (2019) The release of surface-anchored alpha-tectorin, an apical extracellular matrix protein, mediates tectorial membrane organization. Sci Adv 5(11):eaay6300
abstractText  The tectorial membrane (TM) is an apical extracellular matrix (ECM) that hovers over the cochlear sensory epithelium and plays an essential role in auditory transduction. The TM forms facing the luminal endolymph-filled space and exhibits complex ultrastructure. Contrary to the current extracellular assembly model, which posits that secreted collagen fibrils and ECM components self-arrange in the extracellular space, we show that surface tethering of alpha-tectorin (TECTA) via a glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor is essential to prevent diffusion of secreted TM components. In the absence of surface-tethered TECTA, collagen fibrils aggregate randomly and fail to recruit TM glycoproteins. Conversely, conversion of TECTA into a transmembrane form results in a layer of collagens on the epithelial surface that fails to form a multilayered structure. We propose a three-dimensional printing model for TM morphogenesis: A new layer of ECM is printed on the cell surface concomitant with the release of a preestablished layer to generate the multilayered TM.
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