Abstract
The quantitative trait locus ahl8 is a key contributor to the early-onset, age-related hearing loss of DBA/2J mice. A nonsynonymous nucleotide substitution in the mouse fascin-2 gene (Fscn2) is responsible for this phenotype, confirmed by wild-type BAC transgene rescue of hearing loss in DBA/2J mice. In chickens and mice, FSCN2 protein is abundant in hair-cell stereocilia, the actin-rich structures comprising the mechanically sensitive hair bundle, and is concentrated toward stereocilia tips of the bundle's longest stereocilia. FSCN2 expression increases when these stereocilia differentially elongate, suggesting that FSCN2 controls filament growth, stiffens exposed stereocilia, or both. Because ahl8 accelerates hearing loss only in the presence of mutant cadherin 23, a component of hair-cell tip links, mechanotransduction and actin crosslinking must be functionally interrelated.
Introduction
Hair cells of the inner ear detect and transduce mechanical disturbances in the environment, such as sound and head movements (for review, see Gillespie and Müller, 2009). The critical event in mechanotransduction is deflection of the hair bundle, an ensemble of dozens of actin-rich stereocilia projecting from the apical surface of a hair cell. The bundle is held together by extracellular filaments interconnecting stereocilia, including gating elements called tip links (Sakaguchi et al., 2009). Stereocilia are rigid rods that bend at their insertions (Flock et al., 1977), allowing bundle deflections to tension tip links. Elevated tension in tip links, made of cadherin 23 and protocadherin 15 (Sakaguchi et al., 2009), gates transduction channels. For mechanotransduction to be sensitive, stereocilia must be stiff, a feature afforded by abundant actin crosslinkers (Tilney and DeRosier, 1986).
Plastin-1 (PLS1; also known as fimbrin), abundant in intestinal epithelium microvilli (Bretscher and Weber, 1980), was the first actin crosslinker localized to stereocilia (Flock et al., 1982); however, no inner-ear phenotype has been reported in the Pls1 knock-out (Grimm-Günter et al., 2009). By contrast, the jerker (Espnje ) mutant mouse completely lacks another actin crosslinker, espin, has very short stereocilia, and is profoundly deaf (Zheng et al., 2000). Espin is not essential for formation of stereocilia but its expression levels control their length (Rzadzinska et al., 2005). Finally, plastin-3 (PLS3; T-plastin) has been reported to appear transiently in stereocilia during development (Daudet and Lebart, 2002). No comprehensive quantitation of actin crosslinkers in stereocilia has yet been performed, however, raising the possibility that other crosslinkers are present.
Mechanotransduction can go awry when key molecules are damaged or suffer from function-altering mutations. Age-related hearing loss (presbycusis) is highly prevalent in human society, reaching half the population by age 80 (Liu and Yan, 2007). Difficult to study in humans because of complex genetics, environmental influences, and slow loss of auditory function, progressive hearing loss arising from genetic causes may be best dissected using inbred strains of mice. Many inbred mouse strains develop age-related hearing loss, and at least nine quantitative trait loci associated with age-related hearing loss have been identified (Noben-Trauth and Johnson, 2009).
The DBA/2J mouse is used widely in hearing research because of its early-onset, progressive hearing loss (Johnson et al., 2008). This mouse harbors both the ahl mutation of cadherin 23 (Cdh23ahl ), which increases the susceptibility to age-related hearing loss in many inbred strains (Noben-Trauth et al., 2003), and ahl8, a locus on distal chromosome (Chr) 11 that leads to very-early-onset hearing loss when in combination with Cdh23ahl (Johnson et al., 2008). Here we report that the ahl8-causative gene is fascin-2 (Fscn2), which encodes an actin crosslinking protein previously thought to be retina specific. FSCN2 is abundant in stereocilia and is developmentally regulated, appearing in inner-hair-cell stereocilia during final stages of elongation. Late expression and genetic interaction with cadherin 23 suggest that FSCN2 plays a critical role in stabilizing stereocilia after development. Moreover, these results show the power of analyzing complex traits like hearing in inbred strains of mice.
Materials and Methods
Mouse strains and husbandry.
All inbred strain mice examined in this study, except for DBA/2NCrl, originated from The Jackson Laboratory. DBA/2NCrl mice were imported into The Jackson Laboratory from Charles River Laboratories International. Experimental mice were housed in the Research Animal Facility of The Jackson Laboratory, and all procedures involving their use were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. The Jackson Laboratory is accredited by the American Association for the Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care.
Auditory-evoked brainstem response.
Hearing assessment was performed as previously described (Zheng et al., 1999). Mice were anesthetized with 2% tribromoethanol (0.2 ml per 10 g of body weight), and then placed on a heating pad in a sound-attenuating chamber. Needle electrodes were placed just under the skin, with the active electrode placed between the ears just above the vertex of the skull, the ground electrode between the eyes, and the reference electrode underneath the left ear. High-frequency transducers were placed just inside the ear canal and computer-generated sound stimuli were presented at defined intervals. Thresholds were determined for a broadband click and for 8, 16, and 32 kHz pure-tone stimuli by increasing the sound pressure level in 10 dB increments followed by 5 dB increases and decreases to determine the lowest level at which a distinct auditory-evoked brainstem response (ABR) wave pattern could be recognized. Stimulus presentation and data acquisition were performed using the Smart EP evoked potential system (Intelligent Hearing Systems).
Scanning electron microscopy.
Scanning electron microscopy of inner ear organs was performed essentially as described previously (Furness and Hackney, 1986). Inner ears were dissected out of the skull, fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 m cacodylate buffer for 3–4 h at 4°C, and then washed three to four times in 0.1 m phosphate buffer. Hair cells of the organ of Corti were exposed by carefully dissecting away the overlying bone and membrane. Mouse cochleas were processed in osmium tetroxide-thiocarbohydrazide, dehydrated with ethanol, and critical-point dried with hexamethyldisilazane (Electron Microscopy Sciences). Chicken utricles were postfixed in 1% osmium tetroxide, dehydrated in acetone, and critical point dried in liquid CO2. Samples were mounted onto aluminum stubs and sputter-coated to produce a 10–15 nm gold coat. Samples were examined at 20 kV with a Hitachi 3000N VP scanning electron microscope (mouse cochleas), or at 5 kV with an FEI Sirion Field Emission scanning electron microscope (chicken utricles).
Genotyping the rs26996001 single-nucleotide polymorphism in exon 1 of Fscn2.
Genotyping was accomplished by PCR amplification of DNA extracted from tail tips. PCRs were comprised of 100 ng of genomic DNA in a 25 μl reaction volume containing 50 mm KCl, 10 mm Tris-HCl, pH 9.0 (at 25°C), 0.01% Triton X-100, 2.25 mm MgCl2, a 100 nm concentration of each primer (forward and reverse), a 100 μm concentration of each of four deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates, and 1.0 U of TaqDNA polymerase (5 PRIME MasterMix; catalog number 2200100). PCR was performed in a Bio-Rad PTC-200 Peltier Thermal Cycler. Amplification consisted of an initial denaturation at 97°C for 30 s followed by 40 cycles, each consisting of 94°C for 30 s (denaturation), 60°C for 30 s (annealing), and 72°C for 30 s for the first cycle and then increasing by 1 s for each succeeding cycle (extension). After the 40 cycles, the product was incubated for an additional 10 min at 72°C (final extension). PCR products were visualized on 2.5% SeaKem gels (Lonza).
Primer sequences (forward GTGTGGCCTGTGAGATGGAT, reverse GGCTCACACTCAGCAAATGA) were designed to amplify a 216 bp region within exon 1 of Fscn2 containing the rs26996001 single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP). Synthesized primers were purchased from Integrated DNA Technologies. To genotype the SNP in DBA/1J, DBA/2JaSmnJ, DBA/2DeJ, and DBA/2NCrl mice, the 216 bp PCR products were purified with the QIAquick PCR Purification Kit (Qiagen) and sequenced, with the same primers used for DNA amplification, on an Applied Biosystems 3700 DNA Sequencer with an optimized Big Dye Terminator Cycle Sequencing method.
A simple SNP genotyping method was developed using the EagI restriction enzyme that alleviated the need for DNA sequencing. When digested with EagI, the 216 bp PCR product from wild-type DNA is cleaved into 121 and 95 bp fragments, whereas the 216 PCR product from DBA/2J DNA remains intact because the EagI recognition sequence (CGGCCG) is destroyed by the G>A SNP variant (CGGCCA). After PCR, the reaction mixes were incubated at 37°C for 2 h to overnight with 0.8 μl of EagI restriction enzyme (New England Biolabs). The differently sized EagI-digested PCR products were used to screen progeny of host females implanted with microinjected embryos and identify those with B6-derived Fscn2 transgenes. This genotyping method was also used to determine the chronology of Fscn2 SNP variants in DBA/2J strain mice by analysis of archived DNAs. We examined DNA samples from DBA/2J foundation line mice archived in 1985, 1989, 1991, and 1999, and DNA samples from DBA/2J strains with various mutations archived as follows: ho-4J (1975), sdy (1983), ge (1988), gc (1988), pdw (1991), and pe-8J (1992).
Detecting expression of the C57BL/6J-derived Fscn2 transgene in DBA/2J mice.
Total RNA from kidney, brain, and inner ear was isolated with Trizol reagent following the protocol of the manufacturer (Invitrogen). Mouse cDNA samples were synthesized with the iScript cDNA Synthesis Kit (Bio-Rad Laboratories) and used as PCR templates to assay Fscn2 expression. Primers (forward GTGTGGCCTGTGAGATGGAT, reverse GTCTCCTGGTCGATTTGCAT) were designed to amplify a 671 nt region extending from exon 1 to exon 2 of the Fscn2 transcript and containing the rs26996001 SNP. These primers do not amplify a product from genomic DNA because of the large interprimer distance (4778 bp), which spans intron 1. When digested with the restriction enzyme EagI, the 671 PCR product from wild-type C57BL/6J cDNA (which contains two EagI recognition sites) is cleaved into three fragments (353, 223, and 95 bp), whereas the PCR product from DBA/2J cDNA is cleaved into only two fragments (448 and 223 bp), because one of the EagI sites is destroyed by the SNP variant.
Construction of D2.B6-ahl8 congenic lines.
Two congenic lines were constructed by introgression of B6-derived regions of distal chromosome 11 onto the DBA/2J strain background. This introgression was accomplished by repeatedly backcrossing C57BL/6J × DBA/2J hybrids to DBA/2J mice. At each backcross generation (N), hybrid mice were selected on the basis of distal Chr 11 marker genotypes. For the “long” congenic line (D2.B6-D11Mit333-Fscn2), only mice with B6-derived alleles for D11Mit333, D11Mit203, and Fscn2 were selected for backcrossing. For the “short” congenic line (D2.B6-Fscn2/Kjn, Jackson Laboratory stock # 12438), only mice with a B6-derived Fscn2 allele were selected for backcrossing.
Production of DBA/2J mice with C57BL/6J-derived Fscn2 transgenes.
Purified DNA of BAC clone RP24-180N9 (originally derived from C57BL/6J mice) was obtained from The Jackson Laboratory's Molecular Biology Service and provided to the Cell Biology and Microinjection Service for injections into pronuclei of DBA/2J embryos (0.5 dpc). Two hundred eleven mice were produced from multiple injections and host female implantations and were screened for the Fscn2 transgene as described above. Two positive carriers were identified and used to establish two separate lines of transgenic mice: line 1, formally designated DBA/2J-Tg(RP24-180N9)1Kjn (stock #12439); and line 2, designated DBA/2J-Tg(RP24-180N9)2Kjn (stock #12440).
Sequencing chicken FSCN2 cDNA.
Although the assembled chicken genome contains only 3′ end of FSCN2 (∼30% of the total coding sequence), several chicken EST clones (DR426904 and DR425788) contained sequence homologous to the 5′ end of mouse, human, rat, bovine, and Xenopus FSCN2 cDNA sequences and were clearly different from FSCN1 and FSCN3. Using a 5′ primer based on the EST sequence (CACCCCAACGAATGGGATCC) and a 3′ primer derived from the database sequence (TCAGTACTCCCAGAGCGTGGC), we amplified the full-length chicken FSCN2 cDNA sequence, confirming the sequence by Sanger sequencing. The accession number is GU907099.
Proteomics analysis.
E20 chicken utricles were removed from the skull and dissected in cold, oxygenated chicken saline (155 mm NaCl, 6 mm KCl, 2 mm MgCl2, 4 mm CaCl2, 3 mm d-glucose, 10 mm HEPES, pH 7.25); otolithic membranes were removed without any enzymatic treatment. Hair bundles were captured in low-melting-point agarose using the twist-off technique (Gillespie and Hudspeth, 1991; Shin et al., 2007). A variant of the GeLC-MS/MS method (Schirle et al., 2003) was used for protein identification. Bundles from 100 chick ears were subjected to SDS-PAGE using NuPAGE Novex Bis-Tris 4–12% gels; however, proteins were run into the gel only ∼1 cm. After staining with Imperial Protein Stain (Pierce), the region of the gel with bundle proteins was cut into six equal bands. Each gel slice was washed twice with 50% of 100 mm ammonium bicarbonate (AB)/50% acetonitrile, then once with 100% acetonitrile. The proteins in the gel slices were reduced for 45 min with 10 mm DTT in AB, then alkylated for 30 min with 55 mm iodoacetic acid in AB. Gel slices were washed sequentially with 50% AB/50% acetonitrile, then 100% acetonitrile. After drying the gel slices, they were subjected to overnight digestion at 35°C with 10 ng/μl trypsin (Sigma T6567 proteomics grade, from porcine pancreas, dimethylated) in AB. Peptides were extracted sequentially with ammonium bicarbonate/acetonitrile, 5% formic acid, and 100% acetonitrile. Samples were dried and then resuspended in 5% formic acid before tandem mass spectrometry.
Tryptic digests were injected onto a 1 mm × 8 mm trap column (Michrom BioResources) at 20 μl/min in a mobile phase containing 0.1% formic acid. The trap cartridge was then placed in-line with a 0.5 mm × 250 mm column containing 5 μm Zorbax SB-C18 stationary phase (Agilent), and peptides separated by a 2–30% acetonitrile gradient over 140 min at 10 μl/min using a 1100 series capillary HPLC (Agilent). Peptides were analyzed using an LTQ linear ion trap fitted with an Ion Max Source and 34 gauge metal needle kit (ThermoFinnigan). Survey mass spectrometry (MS) scans were alternated with three data-dependent product ion (MS2) scans using the dynamic exclusion feature of the software to increase the number of unique peptides analyzed.
RAW data from the LTQ mass spectrometer were converted to DTA files representing individual MS2 spectra using Bioworks (version 3.3; Thermo Fisher); DTA files were converted to MGF format using merge.pl (Matrix Science). Peak lists were searched with X! Tandem against the Ensembl database (Ensembl Gallus gallus, v53, concatenated reversed sequences and full-length chicken FSCN2 sequence added) with the following parameters: fixed modification, cysteine carbamidomethylation; variable modification, methionine oxidation; one missed cleavage allowed; digest agent, trypsin; refinement modifications, methionine oxidation and N/Q deamidation; no removal of redundant spectra; and parent and fragment ion-mass tolerances of +2.5 to −1 Da and ±0.4 Da, respectively. Custom-designed Mathematica programs were used to carry out isoform resolution and generate intensity-factor calculations. To calculate the relative contributions of PLS1, PLS2, and PLS3, which share several peptides, we weighted the total plastin intensity by the relative numbers of unique peptides identified for each isoform.
Immunocytochemistry.
Inner ear tissues from P5, P10, and P30 mice, E20 chicken embryos, and adult Xenopus laevis were dissected as for proteomics experiments and fixed for 20 min in 3% formaldehyde in chicken saline. Prolonged fixation (>20 min) of the tissue abolished FSCN2 immunoreactivity, especially in the mouse cochlea. Tissues were blocked in blocking solution (PBS containing 3% normal donkey serum, 1% BSA, and 0.2% saponin) and incubated for 2–3 h with the respective primary antibodies in the blocking solution. For immunolocalization of FSCN2 protein in the mouse cochlea and utricle, we used goat polyclonal anti-FSCN2 antibody from Everest Biotech (catalog number EB08002) (5 μg/ml). Polyclonal rabbit antibodies specific for the chicken FSCN2 protein were generated by simultaneously injecting the following peptides into rabbits: CQDEADSSVVFLKSH (#35), CADSELVLRATLWEY (#36), CYTLEFKAGKLAFKD (#37), and CGKNGRYLRGDPAGT (#38). Antibodies specific for each of the peptides were then separately purified with peptide-specific affinity columns. All four of these antibodies worked well in immunocytochemistry and immunoblot experiments. The rabbit polyclonal anti-Xenopus FSCN2 antibody was described previously (Lin-Jones and Burnside, 2007). Similar results were seen with a rabbit polyclonal generated against CKEASLPLPGYKVRE (#74). The rabbit polyclonal anti-ACTG1 antibody was described previously (Belyantseva et al., 2009). After primary antibody incubation, tissues were washed with PBS (3 × 5 min) and incubated with Cy5-labeled donkey anti-rabbit or donkey anti-goat secondary antibody (5 μg/ml). FITC-phalloidin (1 μm) was added to visualize actin. After washing 3 × 5 min, tissues were mounted on glass slides in Vectashield mounting medium (Vector) and covered with #1.5 coverslips, using a cut #1 coverslip as spacer to prevent tissue compression. Images were obtained on an Olympus Fluoview 1000 confocal microscope.
In triple labeling experiments, we used FSCN2 antibody #38 and mouse monoclonal 3G10 from Abnova. For profiling FSCN2, PLS1, and actin staining, 14 bundles from three E21 utricles were used; these utricles were folded so the bundles were seen in profile in the confocal microscope. We excluded bundles for analysis that were not fully captured within the stack, as well as bundles lacking PLS1 or FSCN2 and those without a clear cuticular plate to align. We used ImageJ to generate maximum projections; from these images, we captured fluorescence profiles in all three channels that included approximately half the width of the cell and spanned the cell body and bundle. Actin peaks associated with the cuticular plate were aligned in Excel (Microsoft); we used data from that point to the tip of the bundle. Because the actin profiles aligned very well for all bundles, we did not adjust the profiles to make all bundles the same length. To find relative fluorescence, we divided the PLS1 or FSCN2 intensity by the actin intensity at each point; we normalized actin to its peak fluorescence for each bundle, and did the same for PLS1/actin and FSCN2/actin ratios. Averages ± SEM were plotted.
Immunogold electron microscopy.
E20 chicken utricles were dissected as for proteomics experiments. Utricles were fixed at room temperature for 30 min in 3% formaldehyde (Electron Microscopy Sciences) prepared in chicken saline, in the presence of 10 μm phalloidin (Invitrogen). Utricles were permeabilized and blocked for 2 h at room temperature in 3% donkey serum (Jackson ImmunoResearch), 2% Fraction V BSA (Calbiochem), 0.2% saponin, 10 μm phalloidin, in 1× PBS (132 mm NaCl, 2.7 mm KCl, 4.3 mm Na2HPO4, 1.4 mm KH2PO4, pH 7.3). The utricles were incubated overnight at 4°C with anti-FSCN2 #36 at 10 μg/ml in block (3% donkey serum, 2% BSA, 10 μm phalloidin, in 1× PBS). Tissues were washed 3 × 10 min in PBS, then fixed again with 3% formaldehyde and 0.1% glutaraldehyde (Ted Pella) in PBS for 30 min at room temperature; tissues were then washed 3 × 5 min in PBS.
Utricles were incubated for 48 h at 4°C with goat anti-rabbit-10 nm gold (Ted Pella), diluted 1:10 in block (3% donkey serum, 2% BSA, 10 μm phalloidin, in 1× PBS). Tissues were washed 3 × 5 min in PBS and 1 × 5 min in 0.1 m cacodylate, pH 7.4 (EMS), then fixed again for 30 min with 2.5% glutaraldehyde, 1% tannic acid (EMS), in 0.1 m cacodylate, pH 7.4; tissues were then washed in cacodylate, pH 7.4. Utricles were postfixed with osmium (Polysciences) for 1 h at room temperature (1% osmium in 0.1 m cacodylate buffer, pH 7.4); tissues were then washed in cacodylate, pH 7.4.
Utricles were dehydrated at room temperature with acetone (EMS) for 15 min at each acetone concentration (50%, 70%, 95%, 100%). The tissues were transitioned into epoxy (∼55% Araldite 502, 44% DDSA, 1% DMP-30; EMS) by incubating them with 1:1 acetone/epoxy for 30 min at room temperature, 1:3 acetone/epoxy for 30 min at room temperature, followed by 100% epoxy at room temperature for 2 d. Utricles in epoxy were then heated at 60°C for 48 h.
Thin sections were cut on a Sorvall MT2-B Ultra Microtome, and mounted on 200 square mesh, thin bar, high-definition copper grids (Polysciences). Sections were stained with uranyl acetate (EMS) for 30 min at room temperature, rinsed with warm, distilled water, and stained with lead citrate (EMS) for 10 min at room temperature, followed by a final rinse with distilled water. Sections were viewed on a Philips CM100 transmission electron microscope.
Immunoblotting.
Isolated bundles, still embedded in agarose, and the other tissues were homogenized in reducing SDS-PAGE sample buffer, boiled for 5 min, and microcentrifuged for 5 min to remove insoluble debris. Proteins were resolved using a Bis-Tris SDS PAGE gradient gel (Novex 4–12%, Invitrogen), transferred to PVDF membranes, and stained with India Ink. Blots were then blocked in blocking buffer for 1 h and probed with #36 rabbit polyclonal anti-FSCN2 antibodies for 2–3 h. After 3 × 5 min washing in PBS/0.3% Tween 20, blots were incubated with HRP-conjugated goat anti-rabbit secondary antibody for 1 h, and bands were visualized by ECL reagent.
Quantitative RT-PCR.
The entire temporal bone (containing cochlea, otolith organs, and semicircular canals) was dissected from P5, P12, and P30 C57BL/6 mice. For each age, quadruplicates were prepared, each consisting of five temporal bones. Total RNA was isolated using TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen); 1 μg of total RNA was used for the reverse transcriptase reaction using the Bio-Rad iScript kit. The resulting cDNA was diluted 1:200 to be used as template for the qPCR.
Primers were designed using Primer3 (http://primer3.sourceforge.net/); PCR was performed using iQ SYBR Green Supermix (Bio-Rad) with a DNA Engine Opticon System (MJ Research/Bio-Rad). We measured Ct for transcripts of interest and normalized it to Ct for Gapdh transcripts. We chose Gapdh as the anchor gene as its Ct was relatively stable over the three different ages. Two technical replicates of each of the four biological replicates were carried out.
The following primers for qPCR were used: Gapdh: left, CTTCCGTGTTCCTACCCCCAATGT; right, GCCTGCTTCACCACCTTCTTGATG. Actb: left, GGGCTGTATTCCCCTCCATCGT; right, CTTCTGACCCATTCCCACCATCAC. Actg1: left, GCTATGTTGCCCTGGATTTTGAGC; right, GGAAGGAAGGCTGGAAGAGTGC. Pls1: left, CAAGTTCTCTTTGGTTGGCATCG; right, GGGTAAGTGTTGCGTTCCCTTCAT. Fscn1: left, GTTTGTGACCGCCAAGAAAAATGG; right, GAAGAGTTCCGAGTCCCCTGCTGT. Fscn2: left, CCTCATTTTCCAGAGCAGGCGGTA; right, GGGCTTCAGGTTCCCAGACAAGG.
Results
DBA/2J mice have an early-onset hearing loss and loss of hair bundles
We assessed hearing in DBA/2J and other DBA strain mice by ABR threshold measurements. DBA/2J mice undergo a progressive hearing loss that occurs much earlier and is more profound than in other DBA strains, including the closely related DBA/2NCrl strain (Fig. 1). By 5 weeks of age, the 16 kHz ABR thresholds of DBA/2J mice are already on average 35 dB above those of the normal thresholds exhibited by all other DBA-related strains at that age.
To identify pathological correlates of this hearing loss difference between DBA/2J and DBA/2NCrl mice, we examined cochlear hair cell morphology by scanning electron microscopy (Fig. 2). Hair bundles of DBA/2J mice appeared normal at 2 weeks of age (Fig. 2 a) but then were progressively lost between 1 and 6 months of age (Fig. 2 b–d), similar in time course to the loss of function determined by ABR. Bundle loss occurs first near the base of the cochlea and then spreads apically, corresponding with the onset times of hearing loss from high to low frequencies, typical of age-related hearing loss; degeneration occurs first in outer hair cells and later in inner hair cells. Individual stereocilia within a hair bundle show varying degrees of degeneration (Fig. 2 b–e). In contrast to DBA/2J, bundle loss in DBA/2NCrl mice occurs at much older ages (Fig. 2 h), consistent with the later onset of hearing loss in these mice (Fig. 1). These results show that ahl8 produces a rapid hearing loss that is followed by loss of stereocilia and eventual hair-cell degeneration.
DBA/2J mice have a mutation in the Fscn2 gene
We previously mapped ahl8 by linkage analysis of (DBA/2J × C57BL/6J) × DBA/2J backcross mice (Johnson et al., 2008). The large effect of ahl8 on ABR thresholds of these mice (LOD>50) enabled us to refine the candidate gene interval to an 8 Mb region on distal Chr 11 (position 114–122 Mb, NCBI build m37). Because DBA/2J is the only strain surveyed that shows an ahl8-influenced hearing loss, we searched SNP databases to identify DBA/2J-specific DNA variants within the ahl8 candidate interval that are predicted to cause nonsynonymous codon or splice-site changes. Only a single SNP (rs26996001) meeting these criteria was found (Fig. 3 a), located in exon 1 of the fascin-2 gene (Fscn2). We considered Fscn2, which encodes an actin-bundling protein (Lin-Jones and Burnside, 2007), to be a plausible candidate gene for ahl8 because of its potential effect on the strength, flexibility, or dynamics of the actin-filled stereocilia of hair cells.
The DBA/2J variant of Fscn2 is not found in any of the other 20 inbred strains examined, including the closely related DBA/1J, DBA/2HaSmnJ, DBA/2DeJ, and DBA/2NCrl strains (Fig. 3 a), none of which exhibit early-onset hearing loss (Fig. 1). The known genealogy of these DBA-related strains (Fig. 3 c) and genotyping analysis of archived DBA/2J DNA samples indicate that the Fscn2 G>A mutation occurred in the DBA/2J lineage between 1951 (when it was separated from the DBA/2N lineage) and 1975 (date of the oldest archived sample of DBA/2J DNA).
The DBA/2J variant is predicted to cause a nonsynonymous amino acid change of arginine to histidine at position 109 (R109H) of the mouse FSCN2 protein (Fig. 3 b). This arginine is conserved in orthologous fascin proteins of all vertebrate species examined and in the paralogous fascin-1 (FSCN1) and fascin-3 (FSCN3) proteins of all mammalian species examined, indicating a constrained functional importance for this residue (Fig. 3 b). Examination of the structure of closely related FSCN1 (Protein Databank Structure 1DFC) indicated that R109 is located on the surface of the fascin molecule, in a location that could plausibly be involved in binding actin filaments (Fig. 3 d).
To see whether the hearing loss and Fscn2 DNA differences between DBA/2J and DBA/2NCrl mice genetically cosegregate, we analyzed ABR thresholds and Fscn2 genotypes of F2 intercross progeny from (DBA/2J × DBA/NCrl) F1 hybrids. Six-week-old F2 progeny that were homozygous for the DBA/2J allele of Fscn2 had 16 kHz ABR thresholds that were ∼50 dB above those of heterozygotes or DBA/2NCrl-allele homozygotes (Fig. 3 e). These results show that Fscn2 genotypes strongly cosegregate with the hearing loss differences between these strains and that the DBA/2J allele conferring early onset hearing loss is recessive to the DBA/2NCrl allele.
The wild-type allele of Fscn2 rescues hearing loss
While supportive, cosegregation of Fscn2 genotypes with hearing-loss differences between DBA/2J and other inbred strain mice does not prove causation as variants of other closely linked genes may be responsible for ahl8. We used a congenic-strain approach to further narrow the ahl8 candidate gene region and to determine the isolated effect of ahl8 on hearing loss. We generated two D2.B6-ahl8 congenic lines containing differently sized regions of distal Chr 11 derived from C57BL/6J in an otherwise DBA/2J genome, both containing the Fscn2 gene (Fig. 4 a). Mice heterozygous for either congenic region retained normal hearing at the 2 month test age, whereas their DBA/2J littermates exhibited profound hearing loss (Fig. 4 b,c). The line with the smallest segment of B6-derived Chr 11, which was only ∼3 Mb, had the same effect as the line with the larger (26 Mb) segment. These results confirmed the recessive nature of the DBA/2J allele and showed that its full effect can be explained by genes within the small 3 Mb distal end of Chr 11. Notably, purified hair bundles contain none of the protein products of the ∼100 genes in this region, except for FSCN2 and γ-actin (Shin et al., 2007; J.-B. Shin and P. G. Gillespie, unpublished data).
Although D2.B6-ahl8 congenic line mice had ABR thresholds equivalent to C57BL/6J mice for click, 8 kHz, and 16 kHz auditory stimuli at the 2 month test age, their 32 kHz thresholds were significantly higher than those of C57BL/6J mice (Fig. 4 b,c). These results suggest that there are other genetic differences between DBA/2J and C57BL/6J mice in addition to ahl (which they both carry) and ahl8 that contribute to their different hearing loss profiles.
To provide definitive evidence that Fscn2 underlies ahl8, we undertook a transgenic rescue approach. We produced two positive lines of transgenic mice from multiple DNA microinjections of a 178 kb C57BL/6J-derived BAC (RP24-180N9) containing Fscn2 into DBA/2J embryos (Fig. 4 d). This BAC was chosen because it contains the entire Fscn2 gene and regulatory regions but does not include the closely linked gene for cytoplasmic γ-actin (Actg1), which, although it showed no nonsynonymous or splice site sequence variants in DBA/2J DNA, was still considered a possible candidate gene for ahl8 because it has been shown to underlie progressive hearing loss in humans (Zhu et al., 2003) and mice (Belyantseva et al., 2009). Only one of the two BAC transgenic lines had detectable Fscn2 transgene expression (Fig. 4 e). Mice heterozygous for this expressed transgene (line 2) have significantly diminished hearing loss compared with nontransgenic DBA/2J littermates at 1 month of age (Fig. 4 g). Mice heterozygous for the nonexpressed transgene (line 1) did not show this effect (Fig. 4 f).
Although nine additional named genes are located in the 178 kb genomic region corresponding to BAC RP24-180N9 (Chr 11:120221368–120399719, Build m37), analysis of high quality multifold resequencing data from the Welcome Trust Sanger Mouse Genomes Project (http://www.sanger.ac.uk/resources/mouse/genomes/) revealed that the Fscn2 SNP (at position 120223348) is the only protein-coding sequence difference between DBA2J and C57BL/6J DNA in this region. There are no splice site, frame-shift, or stop codon sequence differences and only one nucleotide difference in the 5′ UTR of the ADP-ribosylation factor-like 16 gene (Arl16; at position 120328095) and one nucleotide difference in the 3′ UTR of the HGF-regulated tyrosine kinase substrate gene (Hgs; at position 120344807). All other nucleotide sequence differences occur within intronic or intergenic regions. These results therefore demonstrate that the Fscn2 mutation causes the early-onset, progressive hearing loss ascribed to ahl8.
Identification and quantitation of FSCN2 in hair bundles
Identification of Fscn2 as the causative gene for ahl8 indicates that Fscn2, which encodes a known actin crosslinker, is expressed in the inner ear. The prominence of actin filaments in hair bundles motivated us to use mass spectrometry to search for actin crosslinkers, and specifically FSCN2, in hair bundles purified from E20 chicken utricles (Gillespie and Hudspeth, 1991; Shin et al., 2007). Although FSCN2 was not detected in our previous experiments (Shin et al., 2007), no FSCN2 gene was present in the Ensembl chicken genome database before release 43 (February, 2007). Release 43 and beyond contain a fragment of the FSCN2 gene, encoding the C-terminal ∼25% of the protein. Although subsequent searches with later Ensembl databases identified FSCN2 as one of the most abundant bundle proteins, we wished to search our mass-spectrometry data using a database containing full-length FSCN2. Using a combination of degenerate-primer RT-PCR and EST database searches, we determined the full-length sequence of chicken FSCN2, which shares high identity with mouse and frog FSCN2 (Fig. 5 a; supplemental Fig. 1, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material). We substituted the FSCN2 sequence fragment in Ensembl release 53 with the full-length sequence and searched this database with product-ion (MS2) spectra from hair bundles. Many FSCN2 peptides were identified from MS2 spectra with very high confidence, often with nearly complete y- and b-ion series (Fig. 5 b). In five mass spectrometry runs, each with bundles from 100 chicken utricles, we identified >1000 FSCN2 peptides, covering nearly the entire sequence (Fig. 5 c).
We used intensity-weighted spectral counting (Shin et al., 2007; Griffin et al., 2010) to quantify hair-bundle FSCN2. Using this approach, actin accounted for 55 ± 2% of the bundle protein on a molar basis, close to the 50–75% estimated from gel scanning (Gillespie and Hudspeth, 1991); by contrast, actin accounted for only ∼10% of the total spectral counts. Chicken FSCN2 was present at a molar ratio of ∼1:8 with actin (Fig. 5 d), much higher than any other actin-crosslinking protein identified in the bundle preparation. At a crosslinker:actin ratio of ∼1:75, PLS1 was the second-most abundant crosslinker (Fig. 5 d); the crosslinkers FSCN1, plastin-2 (PLS2), PLS3, espin (ESPN), espin-like protein (ESPNL), and Xin-related protein 2 (XIRP2) were detected but were much less abundant.
We also adapted our methods for hair-bundle isolation and mass spectrometry to postnatal rat utricle bundles. Surprisingly, PLS1 was the most abundant actin crosslinker in P4–P6 rat bundles, present at a nearly fourfold higher concentration than FSCN2 (Fig. 5 d), the second most abundant crosslinker. ESPNL and XIRP2 were present at low levels in rat bundles; by contrast, FSCN1, PLS2, PLS3, and ESPN were not detected.
We generated polyclonal rabbit antibodies specific for FSCN2 (Fig. 5 a). Comparison of the immunoblot intensity for FSCN2 in hair bundles and whole epithelium with the corresponding total-protein stain showed that FSCN2 was strikingly enriched in bundles (Fig. 5 e–g). In three experiments, the FSCN2:total protein ratio was 109-fold (±39) greater in bundles than in utricular epithelium.
Localization of FSCN2 and PLS1 in hair bundles
We used FSCN2 antibodies to localize the protein in the inner ears of several species. In E20 chicken utricles, FSCN2 immunoreactivity was specifically localized to hair bundles, particularly larger bundles (Fig. 6 a–c), and was absent from smaller, likely immature hair cells (Fig. 6 c, asterisk). In taller bundles, FSCN2 distribution was strikingly nonuniform; immunoreactivity was concentrated in the longer stereocilia and, in all stereocilia, was present in a gradient with the highest concentration at stereocilia tips (Fig. 6 b,c). The last few rows of many hair bundles in the chick utricle had quite elongated stereocilia (Fig. 6 h). Immunogold electron microscopy confirmed the FSCN2 localization and highlighted the concentration in the tallest stereocilia (Fig. 6 e). FSCN2 was not only found in embryonic bundles; the protein was also localized at stereocilia tips in adult Xenopus laevis bundles (Fig. 6 d).
PLS1 immunoreactivity, by contrast, was more apparent in the middle of chick hair bundles (Fig. 6 f,g). Supporting this differential localization, the FSCN2:actin fluorescence ratio peaked at a more distal point of the bundle than did the PLS1:actin ratio (Fig. 6 g); interestingly, neither crosslinker was abundant at stereocilia bases, even above tapers (Fig. 6 g).
In mouse vestibular hair cells, FSCN2 expression was robust at all ages examined (P5, P10, P30); it was highly enriched in hair bundles, and also formed a gradient in stereocilia with the highest concentration at the tips (Fig. 7 g; supplemental Fig. 2, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material). By contrast, in mouse cochlear hair cells, we noted an age-dependent progression of FSCN2 expression. At P5 and earlier, little or no FSCN2 staining was observed in the organ of Corti (Fig. 7 a). By P10, however, inner hair cells, including their bundles, showed strong FSCN2 immunoreactivity (Fig. 7 b); FSCN2 was again concentrated at stereocilia tips, most prominently in the tallest row of stereocilia (Fig. 7 d,e). In mature mice (P30), FSCN2 levels remained high in bundles of inner hair cells and also appeared in outer hair cells, including their bundles (Fig. 7 c). FSCN2 localization in DBA/2J mice was similar temporally and spatially to that in WT mice (Fig. 7 f), suggesting that the R109H mutation has little effect on FSCN2 trafficking or stability. In addition, the protein expression pattern of cytoplasmic γ-actin (ACTG1) in bundles was similar to that of FSCN2, with expression initiated between P5 and P10 and maintained after P10 (Fig. 7 h).
Developmental regulation of Fscn2 transcript levels
To determine whether developmental upregulation of FSCN2 in mouse cochlear hair cells was at the transcriptional or translational level, we isolated total RNA from cochleas of different ages and performed quantitative PCR (qPCR) on reverse-transcribed RNA to measure transcript levels for Fscn2. In agreement with the immunolabeling results, the ratio of Fscn2 transcript levels to those of Gapdh increased fivefold from P5 to P10 (Fig. 7 i), when strong FSCN2 immunoreactivity was first visible in inner hair cells. Fscn2 transcript levels reverted to the P5 level by P30, however, although FSCN2 protein levels remained high. Pls1 transcripts increased approximately twofold at P10, then declined to the P5 level; by contrast, Fscn1 transcripts continuously decreased in abundance from P5 to P30 (data not shown). Actg1 (and Actb) were expressed at levels ∼1000-fold higher than Fscn2 (Fig. 7 a). Although we did not detect an age-dependent increase in Actg1/Gapdh transcript ratios (Fig. 7 i), Actg1 is expressed broadly in the cochlea (Belyantseva et al., 2009) and so any specific modulation in hair-cell levels would have been masked by the presence of Actg1 transcripts elsewhere.
Discussion
A mutant allele of Fscn2 causes rapid hearing loss in DBA/2J mice
We present multiple lines of evidence that a mutation in the Fscn2 gene underlies the early onset progressive hearing loss of DBA/2J mice attributed to the ahl8 locus: (1) the genetic map locations of Fscn2 and ahl8 coincide on distal Chr 11, (2) the Fscn2 mutation is unique to the DBA/2J strain, and closely related DBA strains without this mutation do not exhibit early onset hearing loss and early hair bundle degeneration, (3) the amino acid altered by the Fscn2 mutation in DBA/2J mice is highly conserved in homologous fascin proteins of all species examined, (4) FSCN2 is an abundant actin crosslinker in hair-cell stereocilia, (5) a 3 Mb B6-derived congenic segment of distal Chr 11 containing Fscn2 lessens hearing loss in mice whose genomes are otherwise DBA/2J, and (6) expression of a B6-derived Fscn2 transgene diminishes hearing loss in DBA/2J mice. These results show that FSCN2 plays an important role in hair cells and compellingly demonstrate that the R109H mutation in FSCN2 compromises auditory function, presumably by altering FSCN2 crosslinking in stereocilia.
The R109 residue of FSCN2 is located on the surface of the first β-trefoil domain, opposite the regulatory residue S39 (Fig. 3 d). While one actin-binding domain has been mapped to residues within β-trefoil domains 3 and 4 (Cant and Cooley, 1996; Ono et al., 1997), a second actin-binding domain—necessary for actin crosslinking—has yet to be localized. Indeed, R109 might plausibly participate in actin binding and bundling into fascicles, although additional experiments will be required to test that hypothesis.
Although the Fscn2 gene was knocked out in mice without report of an auditory phenotype (Yokokura et al., 2005), progressive hearing loss cannot be readily detected in mice without specific assays. Interestingly, photoreceptor degeneration exhibited in Fscn2 −/− mice was progressive with increasing age, consistent with the nature of the hearing loss in DBA/2J mice; DBA/2J mice show some age-related retinal degeneration, although it has been attributed to glaucoma (Schuettauf et al., 2004).
Function of FSCN2
FSCN2 is the most abundant actin crosslinking protein in chick vestibular hair bundles. In idealized fascicles of actin filaments, when all crosslinker sites are occupied, the packing density should be as high as one crosslinker per 4–5 actin monomers (Tilney et al., 1983), substantially more than the ratio seen by mass spectrometry (one FSCN2 per eight actins in chick). However, quantitation of FSCN2 in whole bundles underestimates its concentration at distal ends of long stereocilia, where it is concentrated; it might well be present at one FSCN2 per four actins in the upper third of these stereocilia.
FSCN2 expression in hair bundles is linked temporally with elongation of the tallest rows of stereocilia. For example, FSCN2 levels rise in bundles of mouse inner hair cells just when the tallest stereocilia grow substantially longer than their neighbors; 60% of their elongation occurs between P7 and P13 (Peng et al., 2009). By contrast, FSCN2 levels are low in bundles of outer hair cells, which do not elongate in the first week after birth and in fact shorten in the base (Lelli et al., 2009). Like in inner hair cells, FSCN2 is at highest levels in tall stereocilia of chick utricle bundles, particularly in maturing bundles that have already elongated substantially. FSCN2 might control stereocilia actin dynamics, stimulating growth of stereocilia by altering the balance between actin treadmilling and elongation; this hypothesis is consistent with experiments in zebrafish hair cells and tissue-culture cells, which showed that FSCN2 overexpression leads to elongated stereocilia and filopodia (McDermott et al., personal communication).
Alternatively, FSCN2 may play a structural role. The hair bundle's tallest stereocilia, which couple to overlying tectorial or otolithic structures, are often significantly longer than those in adjacent rows; they are nonetheless very rigid (Flock et al., 1977). Finite-element modeling shows that the stereocilium core's shear modulus to Young's modulus ratio must be high enough to prevent the tallest stereocilium from deforming (Cotton and Grant, 2000); FSCN2 might therefore stiffen these exposed stereocilia, enabling better force transmission to tip links. Indeed, members of the fascin family stiffen parallel actin fascicles in other organisms. In Drosophila bristles lacking fascin, actin filaments are poorly ordered and not extensively crosslinked; the resulting bristles are much less stiff (Tilney and DeRosier, 2005). Filopodia lacking FSCN1 undergo buckling, suggesting that they are mechanically weak (Vignjevic et al., 2006). Thus, FSCN2 could be delivered to ends of long, exposed stereocilia to stiffen them.
Specific localization of FSCN2 to tall stereocilia could occur because the protein is specifically targeted there or because it preferentially incorporates into growing actin filaments. Actin in taller stereocilia treadmills faster than those in shorter ones, at least in young animals (Rzadzinska et al., 2004), so FSCN2 localization may simply report treadmilling rates. Reduced Fscn2 expression at P30 while FSCN2 protein remains elevated suggests that this and other stereocilia proteins may be turned over at a rate lower than that seen earlier in development.
FSCN2 and PLS1 show opposing gradients in stereocilia, which can explain the observation that stereocilia in the frog sacculus are 0.7-fold narrower in diameter at their tips than near their bases in the ankle region (García et al., 1998); fascin crossbridges produce an actin filament spacing of 8.5 nm (DeRosier et al., 1977), while filaments are spaced 12 nm apart by plastin crossbridges (Volkmann et al., 2001), also a ratio of 0.7. One model for differential localization of two crosslinkers within the same actin fascicle suggests that FSCN2 expression late in hair-bundle development elongates actin filaments but slows treadmilling, quieting stereocilia actin dynamics and trapping PLS1 toward stereocilia bases. In a second model, FSCN2 is preferentially incorporated into treadmilling actin filaments, but dissociates rapidly and is replaced by PLS1 crossbridges; this mechanism is supported by experiments that show that FSCN1 crossbridges dissociate rapidly in filopodia (Vignjevic et al., 2006). Regardless, it is remarkable that stereocilia employ two primary actin crosslinkers, each of which can form tight, mechanically strong actin fascicles; that FSCN2 is essential for maintaining normal auditory function suggests either that it plays a special role that cannot be performed by PLS1 or that FSCN2-PLS1-actin fascicles have a composite behavior that cannot be matched with only one type of crosslinker (Tseng et al., 2002).
Degeneration of hair bundles in DBA/2J mice resembles degeneration seen in mice lacking γ-actin, which is required for stereocilia maintenance (Belyantseva et al., 2009). In both DBA/2J mice and γ-actin knock-out mice, hair bundles form normally but then progressively deteriorate, and by 16 weeks of age nearly all outer hair cell bundles show some missing or degraded stereocilia. Remarkably, Fscn2 is only 13.0 kb from the γ-actin gene, Actg1, on mouse Chr 11 (Tubb et al., 2000) and undergoes upregulation in hair cells at the same time as does Actg1. Likewise, FSCN2 is only 15.6 kb from ACTG1 on human Chr 17. Nearby genes often share regulatory control (Michalak, 2008); because Actb and Fscn1 are similarly closely linked on mouse Chr 5 (and ACTB and FSCN1 on human Chr 7), we suggest that hair cells—as well as other cells—coordinately regulate these actin–fascin gene pairs for specific purposes.
Progressive hearing loss
Age-related, progressive hearing loss is influenced by many environmental and genetic factors, including variable exposures to noise, drugs and disease, genetic heterogeneity, allelic heterogeneity, and modifier loci (Johnson et al., 2006). Inbred mouse strains, which offer controlled genetics and minimized environmental variation, have shown that interactions of multiple alleles of the same gene or different genes can dramatically affect hearing acuity.
A particularly good example of such a genetic interaction is between Cdh23ahl (Noben-Trauth et al., 2003) and ahl8, where rapid hearing loss in ahl8/ahl8 mice is completely dependent on Cdh23ahl homozygosity (Johnson et al., 2008). Mice that are homozygous for both Cdh23ahl and ahl8 display hearing loss that progresses much more rapidly than in mice that are heterozygous for one allele or the other (Johnson et al., 2008). Interestingly, Cdh23ahl homozygosity sensitizes mice to the effects of other gene mutations, producing rapid hearing loss (Johnson et al., 2006).
These observations suggest that presbycusis might be more prevalent in individuals with multiple, relatively subtle, detrimental alleles encoding critical hair-bundle proteins such as FSCN2. Moreover, as ACTG1 is close to FSCN2, FSCN2 mutations may be responsible for those cases of DFNA20/26, a progressive dominant hearing loss disorder in humans, in which ACTG1 mutations have not been found. Identification of Fscn2 as the gene underlying the early hearing loss of DBA/2J mice will aid interpretation of results from the many studies that use this inbred strain. Moreover, that this mutation is unique to DBA/2J and not found in other DBA/2 designated strains provides a cautionary example of why genetic identity should not be assumed for like-named inbred strains from different sources. Finally, our results highlight the critical role that hair-bundle proteins play in hearing and show how a combination of proteomic and genetic approaches can be used to identify these proteins and determine their functional importance.
Footnotes
- Received March 25, 2010.
- Revision received May 7, 2010.
- Accepted June 6, 2010.
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This work was supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH) Grants K99 DC009412 (to J.B.S.), R01 DC002368 (to P.G.G.), R21 DC008801 (to P.G.G.), P30 DC005983 (to P.G.G.), and DC005827 (to K.R.J.). The Jackson Laboratory institutional shared services are supported by NIH National Cancer Institute Support Grant CA34196. We thank Beth Burnside for the Xenopus anti-FSCN2 antibody and FSCN2 cDNA and Karen Friderici for the anti-ACTG1 antibody.
- Correspondence should be addressed to Peter G. Gillespie or Kenneth R. Johnson at the above addresses, gillespp{at}ohsu.edu or ken.johnson{at}jax.org
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