Lineage-tracing and translatomic analysis of damage-inducible mitotic cochlear progenitors identifies candidate genes regulating regeneration

Udagawa, Tomokatsu and Atkinson, Patrick J. and Milon, Beatrice and Abitbol, Julia M. and Song, Yang and Sperber, Michal and Huarcaya Najarro, Elvis and Scheibinger, Mirko and Elkon, Ran and Hertzano, Ronna and Cheng, Alan G. and Bronner, Marianne E. (2021) Lineage-tracing and translatomic analysis of damage-inducible mitotic cochlear progenitors identifies candidate genes regulating regeneration. PLOS Biology, 19 (11). e3001445. ISSN 1545-7885

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Abstract

Cochlear supporting cells (SCs) are glia-like cells critical for hearing function. In the neonatal cochlea, the greater epithelial ridge (GER) is a mitotically quiescent and transient organ, which has been shown to nonmitotically regenerate SCs. Here, we ablated Lgr5+ SCs using Lgr5-DTR mice and found mitotic regeneration of SCs by GER cells in vivo. With lineage tracing, we show that the GER houses progenitor cells that robustly divide and migrate into the organ of Corti to replenish ablated SCs. Regenerated SCs display coordinated calcium transients, markers of the SC subtype inner phalangeal cells, and survive in the mature cochlea. Via RiboTag, RNA-sequencing, and gene clustering algorithms, we reveal 11 distinct gene clusters comprising markers of the quiescent and damaged GER, and damage-responsive genes driving cell migration and mitotic regeneration. Together, our study characterizes GER cells as mitotic progenitors with regenerative potential and unveils their quiescent and damaged translatomes.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Scholar Eprints > Biological Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 06 Mar 2023 05:55
Last Modified: 15 Oct 2024 11:41
URI: http://repository.stmscientificarchives.com/id/eprint/1121

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