Hair cell recovery in mitotically blocked cultures of the bullfrog saccule
- 24 October 2000
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 97 (22) , 11722-11729
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.97.22.11722
Abstract
Hair cells in many nonmammalian vertebrates are regenerated by the mitotic division of supporting cell progenitors and the differentiation of the resulting progeny into new hair cells and supporting cells. Recent studies have shown that nonmitotic hair cell recovery after aminoglycoside-induced damage can also occur in the vestibular organs. Using hair cell and supporting cell immunocytochemical markers, we have used confocal and electron microscopy to examine the fate of damaged hair cells and the origin of immature hair cells after gentamicin treatment in mitotically blocked cultures of the bullfrog saccule. Extruding and fragmenting hair cells, which undergo apoptotic cell death, are replaced by scar formations. After losing their bundles, sublethally damaged hair cells remain in the sensory epithelium for prolonged periods, acquiring supporting cell-like morphology and immunoreactivity. These modes of damage appear to be mutually exclusive, implying that sublethally damaged hair cells repair their bundles. Transitional cells, coexpressing hair cell and supporting cell markers, are seen near scar formations created by the expansion of neighboring supporting cells. Most of these cells have morphology and immunoreactivity similar to that of sublethally damaged hair cells. Ultrastructural analysis also reveals that most immature hair cells had autophagic vacuoles, implying that they originated from damaged hair cells rather than supporting cells. Some transitional cells are supporting cells participating in scar formations. Supporting cells also decrease in number during hair cell recovery, supporting the conclusion that some supporting cells undergo phenotypic conversion into hair cells without an intervening mitotic event.Keywords
This publication has 87 references indexed in Scilit:
- Understanding of Ears, Bristles Jumps a NotchScience, 1998
- How Hearing HappensNeuron, 1997
- Macrophage activity in organ cultures of the avian cochlea: Demonstration of a resident population and recruitment to sites of hair cell lesionsJournal of Neurobiology, 1997
- Evidence for supporting cell proliferation and hair cell differentiation in the basilar papilla of adult Belgian Waterslager canaries (Serinus canarius)Journal of Comparative Neurology, 1997
- Post-Traumatic Survival and Recovery of the Auditory Sensory Cells in CultureActa Oto-Laryngologica, 1996
- Supporting cells in isolated sensory epithelia of avian utricles proliferate in serum-free cultureNeuroReport, 1995
- Evidence for supporting cell mitosis in response to acoustic trauma in the avian inner earJournal of Neurocytology, 1992
- Anatomical correlates of functional recovery in the avian inner ear following aminoglycoside ototoxicityThe Laryngoscope, 1991
- How the ear's works workNature, 1989
- Cell production in the chicken cochleaJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1989