The role of her4 in inner ear development and its relationship with proneural genes and Notch signalling.

The generation of sensory neurons and hair cells of the inner ear is under tight control. Different members of the Hairy and Enhancer of Split genes (HES) are expressed in the inner ear, their full array of functions still not being disclosed. We have previously shown that zebrafish her9 acts as a p...

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Main Authors: Marija Radosevic, Laura Fargas, Berta Alsina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4192589?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-86317b987fdb4fc5b92a55d123a5ea9b2020-11-24T21:50:25ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01910e10986010.1371/journal.pone.0109860The role of her4 in inner ear development and its relationship with proneural genes and Notch signalling.Marija RadosevicLaura FargasBerta AlsinaThe generation of sensory neurons and hair cells of the inner ear is under tight control. Different members of the Hairy and Enhancer of Split genes (HES) are expressed in the inner ear, their full array of functions still not being disclosed. We have previously shown that zebrafish her9 acts as a patterning gene to restrict otic neurogenesis to an anterior domain. Here, we disclose the role of another her gene, her4, a zebrafish ortholog of Hes5 that is expressed in the neurogenic and sensory domains of the inner ear. The expression of her4 is highly dynamic and spatiotemporally regulated. We demonstrate by loss of function experiments that in the neurogenic domain her4 expression is under the regulation of neurogenin1 (neurog1) and the Notch pathway. Moreover, her4 participates in lateral inhibition during otic neurogenesis since her4 knockdown results in overproduction of the number of neurog1 and deltaB-positive otic neurons. In contrast, during sensorigenesis her4 is initially Notch-independent and induced by atoh1b in a broad prosensory domain. At later stages her4 expression becomes Notch-dependent in the future sensory domains but loss of her4 does not result in hair cell overproduction, suggesting that there other her genes can compensate its function.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4192589?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marija Radosevic
Laura Fargas
Berta Alsina
spellingShingle Marija Radosevic
Laura Fargas
Berta Alsina
The role of her4 in inner ear development and its relationship with proneural genes and Notch signalling.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Marija Radosevic
Laura Fargas
Berta Alsina
author_sort Marija Radosevic
title The role of her4 in inner ear development and its relationship with proneural genes and Notch signalling.
title_short The role of her4 in inner ear development and its relationship with proneural genes and Notch signalling.
title_full The role of her4 in inner ear development and its relationship with proneural genes and Notch signalling.
title_fullStr The role of her4 in inner ear development and its relationship with proneural genes and Notch signalling.
title_full_unstemmed The role of her4 in inner ear development and its relationship with proneural genes and Notch signalling.
title_sort role of her4 in inner ear development and its relationship with proneural genes and notch signalling.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description The generation of sensory neurons and hair cells of the inner ear is under tight control. Different members of the Hairy and Enhancer of Split genes (HES) are expressed in the inner ear, their full array of functions still not being disclosed. We have previously shown that zebrafish her9 acts as a patterning gene to restrict otic neurogenesis to an anterior domain. Here, we disclose the role of another her gene, her4, a zebrafish ortholog of Hes5 that is expressed in the neurogenic and sensory domains of the inner ear. The expression of her4 is highly dynamic and spatiotemporally regulated. We demonstrate by loss of function experiments that in the neurogenic domain her4 expression is under the regulation of neurogenin1 (neurog1) and the Notch pathway. Moreover, her4 participates in lateral inhibition during otic neurogenesis since her4 knockdown results in overproduction of the number of neurog1 and deltaB-positive otic neurons. In contrast, during sensorigenesis her4 is initially Notch-independent and induced by atoh1b in a broad prosensory domain. At later stages her4 expression becomes Notch-dependent in the future sensory domains but loss of her4 does not result in hair cell overproduction, suggesting that there other her genes can compensate its function.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4192589?pdf=render
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