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Mariner is defective in myosin VIIA: a zebrafish model for human hereditary deafness

Title: Mariner is defective in myosin VIIA: a zebrafish model for human hereditary deafness
Authors: Ernest, Sylvain; Rauch, Gerd-Jörg; Haffter, Pascal; Geisler, Robert; Petit, Christine; Nicolson, Teresa
Publisher Information: Oxford University Press
Publication Year: 2000
Collection: HighWire Press (Stanford University)
Subject Terms: REPORTS
Description: The zebrafish ( Danio rerio ) possesses two mechanosensory organs believed to be homologous to each other: the inner ear, which is responsible for the senses of audition and equilibrium, and the lateral line organ, which is involved in the detection of water movements. Eight zebrafish circler or auditory/vestibular mutants appear to have defects specific to sensory hair cell function. The circler genes may therefore encode components of the mechanotransduction apparatus and/or be the orthologous counterparts of the genes underlying human hereditary deafness. In this report, we show that the phenotype of the circler mutant, mariner , is due to mutations in the gene encoding Myosin VIIA, an unconventional myosin which is expressed in sensory hair cells and is responsible for various types of hearing disorder in humans, namely Usher 1B syndrome, DFNB2 and DFNA11. Our analysis of the fine structure of hair bundles in the mariner mutants suggests that a missense mutation within the C-terminal FERM domain of the tail of Myosin VIIA has the potential to dissociate the two different functions of the protein in hair bundle integrity and apical endocytosis. Notably, mariner sensory hair cells display morphological and functional defects that are similar to those present in mouse shaker-1 hair cells which are defective in Myosin VIIA. Thus, this study demonstrates the striking conservation of the function of Myosin VIIA throughout vertebrate evolution and establishes mariner as the first fish model for human hereditary deafness.
Document Type: text
File Description: text/html
Language: English
Relation: http://hmg.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/9/14/2189; http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hmg/9.14.2189
DOI: 10.1093/hmg/9.14.2189
Availability: http://hmg.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/9/14/2189; https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/9.14.2189
Rights: Copyright (C) 2000, Oxford University Press
Accession Number: edsbas.423CEFCD
Database: BASE