Ephrin-A5/EphA4 signalling controls specific afferent targeting to cochlear hair cells

2013 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Ephrin-A5/EphA4 signalling controls specific afferent targeting to cochlear hair cells​
Defourny, J.; Poirrier, A.-L.; Lallemend, F.; Sanchez, S. M.; Neef, J. ; Vanderhaeghen, P. & Soriano, E. et al.​ (2013) 
Nature Communications4 art. 1438​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms2445 

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Authors
Defourny, Jean; Poirrier, Anne-Lise; Lallemend, Francois; Sanchez, Susana Mateo; Neef, Jakob ; Vanderhaeghen, Pierre; Soriano, Eduardo; Peuckert, Christiane; Kullander, Klas; Fritzsch, Bernd; Laurent, Nguyen; Moonen, Gustave; Moser, Tobias ; Malgrange, Brigitte
Abstract
Hearing requires an optimal afferent innervation of sensory hair cells by spiral ganglion neurons in the cochlea. Here we report that complementary expression of ephrin-A5 in hair cells and EphA4 receptor among spiral ganglion neuron populations controls the targeting of type I and type II afferent fibres to inner and outer hair cells, respectively. In the absence of ephrin-A5 or EphA4 forward signalling, a subset of type I projections aberrantly overshoot the inner hair cell layer and invade the outer hair cell area. Lack of type I afferent synapses impairs neurotransmission from inner hair cells to the auditory nerve. By contrast, radial shift of type I projections coincides with a gain of presynaptic ribbons that could enhance the afferent signalling from outer hair cells. Ephexin-1, cofilin and myosin light chain kinase act downstream of EphA4 to induce type I spiral ganglion neuron growth cone collapse. Our findings constitute the first identification of an Eph/ephrin-mediated mutual repulsion mechanism responsible for specific sorting of auditory projections in the cochlea.
Issue Date
2013
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Journal
Nature Communications 
ISSN
2041-1723

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