phalloidine and Deafness

phalloidine has been researched along with Deafness* in 4 studies

Other Studies

4 other study(ies) available for phalloidine and Deafness

ArticleYear
Otolith tethering in the zebrafish otic vesicle requires Otogelin and α-Tectorin.
    Development (Cambridge, England), 2015, Mar-15, Volume: 142, Issue:6

    Otoliths are biomineralised structures important for balance and hearing in fish. Their counterparts in the mammalian inner ear, otoconia, have a primarily vestibular function. Otoliths and otoconia form over sensory maculae and are attached to the otolithic membrane, a gelatinous extracellular matrix that provides a physical coupling between the otolith and the underlying sensory epithelium. In this study, we have identified two proteins required for otolith tethering in the zebrafish ear, and propose that there are at least two stages to this process: seeding and maintenance. The initial seeding step, in which otolith precursor particles tether directly to the tips of hair cell kinocilia, fails to occur in the einstein (eis) mutant. The gene disrupted in eis is otogelin (otog); mutations in the human OTOG gene have recently been identified as causative for deafness and vestibular dysfunction (DFNB18B). At later larval stages, maintenance of otolith tethering to the saccular macula is dependent on tectorin alpha (tecta) function, which is disrupted in the rolling stones (rst) mutant. α-Tectorin (Tecta) is a major constituent of the tectorial membrane in the mammalian cochlea. Mutations in the human TECTA gene can cause either dominant (DFNA8/12) or recessive (DFNB21) forms of deafness. Our findings indicate that the composition of extracellular otic membranes is highly conserved between mammals and fish, reinforcing the view that the zebrafish is an excellent model system for the study of deafness and vestibular disease.

    Topics: Animals; Cloning, Molecular; Deafness; Extracellular Matrix Proteins; Fluorescence; Humans; Immunohistochemistry; In Situ Hybridization; Membrane Glycoproteins; Microscopy, Confocal; Otolithic Membrane; Phalloidine; Vestibular Diseases; Zebrafish; Zebrafish Proteins

2015
A mutation of beta -actin that alters depolymerization dynamics is associated with autosomal dominant developmental malformations, deafness, and dystonia.
    American journal of human genetics, 2006, Volume: 78, Issue:6

    Actin, one of the major filamentous cytoskeletal molecules, is involved in a variety of cellular functions. Whereas an association between muscle actin mutations and skeletal and cardiac myopathies has been well documented, reports of human disease arising from mutations of nonmuscle actin genes have been rare. We have identified a missense point mutation in the gene coding for beta -actin that results in an arginine-to-tryptophan substitution at position 183. The disease phenotype includes developmental midline malformations, sensory hearing loss, and a delayed-onset generalized dystonia syndrome in monozygotic twins. Cellular studies of a lymphoblastoid cell line obtained from an affected patient demonstrated morphological abnormalities of the actin cytoskeleton and altered actin depolymerization dynamics in response to latrunculin A, an actin monomer-sequestering drug. Resistance to latrunculin A was also observed in NIH 3T3 cells expressing the mutant actin. These findings suggest that mutations in nonmuscle actins may be associated with a broad spectrum of developmental malformations and/or neurological abnormalities such as dystonia.

    Topics: Actins; Amino Acid Sequence; Amino Acid Substitution; Animals; Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic; Deafness; Drug Resistance; Dystonia; Hearing Loss, Sensorineural; Humans; Male; Mice; Microsatellite Repeats; Molecular Sequence Data; Mutation, Missense; Nervous System Malformations; NIH 3T3 Cells; Phalloidine; Stress Fibers; Syndrome; Thiazoles; Thiazolidines; Transfection; Twins, Monozygotic

2006
A receptor-like inositol lipid phosphatase is required for the maturation of developing cochlear hair bundles.
    The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience, 2003, Oct-08, Volume: 23, Issue:27

    A screen for protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) expressed in the chick inner ear yielded a high proportion of clones encoding an avian ortholog of protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor Q (Ptprq), a receptor-like PTP. Ptprq was first identified as a transcript upregulated in rat kidney in response to glomerular nephritis and has recently been shown to be active against inositol phospholipids. An antibody to the intracellular domain of Ptprq, anti-Ptprq, stains hair bundles in mice and chicks. In the chick ear, the distribution of Ptprq is almost identical to that of the 275 kDa hair-cell antigen (HCA), a component of hair-bundle shaft connectors recognized by a monoclonal antibody (mAb) that stains inner-ear hair bundles and kidney glomeruli. Furthermore, anti-Ptprq immunoblots a 275 kDa polypeptide immunoprecipitated by the anti-HCA mAb from the avian inner ear, indicating that the HCA and Ptprq are likely to be the same molecule. In two transgenic mouse strains with different mutations in Ptprq, anti-Ptprq immunoreactivity cannot be detected in the ear. Shaft connectors are absent from mutant vestibular hair bundles, but the stereocilia forming the hair bundle are not splayed, indicating that shaft connectors are not necessary to hold the stereocilia together; however, the mice show rapid postnatal deterioration in cochlear hair-bundle structure, associated with smaller than normal transducer currents with otherwise normal adaptation properties, a progressive loss of basal-coil cochlear hair cells, and deafness. These results reveal that Ptprq is required for formation of the shaft connectors of the hair bundle, the normal maturation of cochlear hair bundles, and the long-term survival of high-frequency auditory hair cells.

    Topics: Animals; Antigens, Surface; Cell Separation; Cell Survival; Chickens; Cilia; Cochlea; Deafness; Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental; Hair Cells, Auditory; Mechanotransduction, Cellular; Mice; Mice, Knockout; Mice, Transgenic; Molecular Sequence Data; Patch-Clamp Techniques; Phalloidine; Phosphatidylinositols; Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases; Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases; Receptor-Like Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases, Class 3; RNA, Messenger

2003
Hair cells in the inner ear of the pirouette and shaker 2 mutant mice.
    Journal of neurocytology, 2000, Volume: 29, Issue:4

    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.

    Topics: Actin Cytoskeleton; Animals; Animals, Newborn; Cilia; Deafness; Disease Models, Animal; Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem; Hair Cells, Auditory; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Neurologic Mutants; Microscopy, Electron; Microscopy, Electron, Scanning; Organ of Corti; Phalloidine; Vestibular Diseases; Vestibule, Labyrinth

2000