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Molecular cloning and functional characterization of chicken Atonal homologue 1: a comparison with human Atoh1

Authors: 
Mulvaney JF, Amemiya Y, Freeman SD, Ladher RK, Dabdoub A
Citation: 
Biol Cell. 2014 Nov 21. doi: 10.1111/boc.201400078. [Epub ahead of print]
Abstract: 
BACKGROUND INFORMATION: The vertebrate basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor Atoh1 is essential for maturation and survival of mechanosensory hair cells of the inner ear, neurogenesis, differentiation of the intestine, homeostasis of the colon and is implicated in cancer progression. Given that mutations in Atoh1 are detected in malignant tumors, study of functionally different Atoh1 alleles and homologues might yield useful avenues for investigation. The predicted sequence of chicken Atoh1 (cAtoh1) has large regions of dissimilarity to that of mammalian Atoh1 homologues. We hypothesize that cAtoh1 might have intrinsic functional differences to mammalian Atoh1. RESULTS: In this study we cloned and sequenced the full open reading frame of cAtoh1. In overexpression experiments we show that this sequence is sufficient to generate a cAtoh1 protein capable of inducing hair cell markers when expressed in nonsensory regions of the developing inner ear, and that morpholino-mediated knock-down using a section of the sequence 5' to the start codon inhibits differentiation of hair cells in the chicken basilar papilla. Furthermore, we compare the behavior of cAtoh1 and human Atoh1 (hAtoh1) in embryonic mouse cochlear explants, showing that cAtoh1 is a potent inducer of hair cell differentiation and that it can overcome Sox2 mediated repression of hair cell differentiation more effectively than human Atoh1. CONCLUSIONS: cAtoh1 is both necessary and sufficient for avian mechanosensory hair cell differentiation. The non-conserved regions of the cAtoh1 coding region have functional consequences on its behavior. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Epub: 
Yes
Organism or Cell Type: 
Gallus gallus (chick)
Delivery Method: 
electroporation