Thomas Paul V, Cheng Andrew L, Colby Candice C, Liu Liqian, Patel Chintan K, Josephs Lydia, Duncan R Keith
Kresge Hearing Research Institute, 5323 Medical Science Building I, 1150 West Medical Center Drive, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-5616, USA.
Kresge Hearing Research Institute, 5323 Medical Science Building I, 1150 West Medical Center Drive, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-5616, USA.
J Proteomics. 2014 May 30;103:178-93. doi: 10.1016/j.jprot.2014.03.037. Epub 2014 Apr 5.
Biological membranes organize and compartmentalize cell signaling into discrete microdomains, a process that often involves stable, cholesterol-rich platforms that facilitate protein-protein interactions. Polarized cells with distinct apical and basolateral cell processes rely on such compartmentalization to maintain proper function. In the cochlea, a variety of highly polarized sensory and non-sensory cells are responsible for the early stages of sound processing in the ear, yet little is known about the mechanisms that traffic and organize signaling complexes within these cells. We sought to determine the prevalence, localization, and protein composition of cholesterol-rich lipid microdomains in the cochlea. Lipid raft components, including the scaffolding protein caveolin and the ganglioside GM1, were found in sensory, neural, and glial cells. Mass spectrometry of detergent-resistant membrane (DRM) fractions revealed over 600 putative raft proteins associated with subcellular localization, trafficking, and metabolism. Among the DRM constituents were several proteins involved in human forms of deafness including those involved in ion homeostasis, such as the potassium channel KCNQ1, the co-transporter SLC12A2, and gap junction proteins GJA1 and GJB6. The presence of caveolin in the cochlea and the abundance of proteins in cholesterol-rich DRM suggest that lipid microdomains play a significant role in cochlear physiology.
Although mechanisms underlying cholesterol synthesis, homeostasis, and compartmentalization in the ear are poorly understood, there are several lines of evidence indicating that cholesterol is a key modulator of cochlear function. Depletion of cholesterol in mature sensory cells alters calcium signaling, changes excitability during development, and affects the biomechanical processes in outer hair cells that are responsible for hearing acuity. More recently, we have established that the cholesterol-modulator beta-cyclodextrin is capable of inducing significant and permanent hearing loss when delivered subcutaneously at high doses. We hypothesize that proteins involved in cochlear homeostasis and otopathology are partitioned into cholesterol-rich domains. The results of a large-scale proteomic analysis point to metabolic processes, scaffolding/trafficking, and ion homeostasis as particularly associated with cholesterol microdomains. These data offer insight into the proteins and protein families that may underlie cholesterol-mediated effects in sensory cell excitability and cyclodextrin ototoxicity.
生物膜将细胞信号组织并分隔到离散的微区中,这一过程通常涉及促进蛋白质 - 蛋白质相互作用的稳定的、富含胆固醇的平台。具有明显顶端和基底外侧细胞突起的极化细胞依赖这种分隔来维持正常功能。在耳蜗中,多种高度极化的感觉和非感觉细胞负责耳朵声音处理的早期阶段,但对于这些细胞内信号复合物的运输和组织机制知之甚少。我们试图确定耳蜗中富含胆固醇的脂质微区的普遍性、定位和蛋白质组成。在感觉细胞、神经细胞和神经胶质细胞中发现了脂质筏成分,包括支架蛋白小窝蛋白和神经节苷脂GM1。对耐去污剂膜(DRM)组分的质谱分析揭示了600多种与亚细胞定位、运输和代谢相关的推定筏蛋白。在DRM成分中,有几种与人类耳聋形式有关的蛋白质,包括参与离子稳态的蛋白质,如钾通道KCNQ1、共转运蛋白SLC12A2以及间隙连接蛋白GJA1和GJB6。耳蜗中小窝蛋白的存在以及富含胆固醇的DRM中蛋白质的丰富表明脂质微区在耳蜗生理学中起重要作用。
尽管耳朵中胆固醇合成、稳态和分隔的潜在机制了解甚少,但有几条证据表明胆固醇是耳蜗功能的关键调节因子。成熟感觉细胞中胆固醇的耗竭会改变钙信号,改变发育过程中的兴奋性,并影响负责听力敏锐度的外毛细胞中的生物力学过程。最近,我们已经确定,胆固醇调节剂β - 环糊精在高剂量皮下给药时能够引起显著且永久性的听力损失。我们假设参与耳蜗稳态和耳病理学的蛋白质被分隔到富含胆固醇的结构域中。大规模蛋白质组学分析的结果表明,代谢过程、支架/运输和离子稳态与胆固醇微区特别相关。这些数据为可能是胆固醇介导的感觉细胞兴奋性和环糊精耳毒性作用基础的蛋白质和蛋白质家族提供了见解。