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Fgf10 is required for specification of non-sensory regions of the cochlear epithelium.

  • Lisa D Urness‎ et al.
  • Developmental biology‎
  • 2015‎

The vertebrate inner ear is a morphologically complex sensory organ comprised of two compartments, the dorsal vestibular apparatus and the ventral cochlear duct, required for motion and sound detection, respectively. Fgf10, in addition to Fgf3, is necessary for the earliest stage of otic placode induction, but continued expression of Fgf10 in the developing otic epithelium, including the prosensory domain and later in Kolliker׳s organ, suggests additional roles for this gene during morphogenesis of the labyrinth. While loss of Fgf10 was implicated previously in semicircular canal agenesis, we show that Fgf10(-/+) embryos also exhibit a reduction or absence of the posterior semicircular canal, revealing a dosage-sensitive requirement for FGF10 in vestibular development. In addition, we show that Fgf10(-/-) embryos have previously unappreciated defects of cochlear morphogenesis, including a somewhat shortened duct, and, surprisingly, a substantially narrower duct. The mutant cochlear epithelium lacks Reissner׳s membrane and a large portion of the outer sulcus-two non-contiguous, non-sensory domains. Marker gene analyses revealed effects on Reissner׳s membrane as early as E12.5-E13.5 and on the outer sulcus by E15.5, stages when Fgf10 is expressed in close proximity to Fgfr2b, but these effects were not accompanied by changes in epithelial cell proliferation or death. These data indicate a dual role for Fgf10 in cochlear development: to regulate outgrowth of the duct and subsequently as a bidirectional signal that sequentially specifies Reissner׳s membrane and outer sulcus non-sensory domains. These findings may help to explain the hearing loss sometimes observed in LADD syndrome subjects with FGF10 mutations.


FGF signaling regulates otic placode induction and refinement by controlling both ectodermal target genes and hindbrain Wnt8a.

  • Lisa D Urness‎ et al.
  • Developmental biology‎
  • 2010‎

The inner ear epithelium, with its complex array of sensory, non-sensory, and neuronal cell types necessary for hearing and balance, is derived from a thickened patch of head ectoderm called the otic placode. Mouse embryos lacking both Fgf3 and Fgf10 fail to initiate inner ear development because appropriate patterns of gene expression fail to be specified within the pre-otic field. To understand the transcriptional "blueprint" initiating inner ear development, we used microarray analysis to identify prospective placode genes that were differentially expressed in control and Fgf3(-)(/)(-);Fgf10(-)(/)(-) embryos. Several genes in the down-regulated class, including Hmx3, Hmx2, Foxg1, Sox9, Has2, and Slc26a9 were validated by in situ hybridization. We also assayed candidate target genes suggested by other studies of otic induction. Two placode markers, Fgf4 and Foxi3, were down-regulated in Fgf3(-)(/)(-);Fgf10(-)(/)(-) embryos, whereas Foxi2, a cranial epidermis marker, was expanded in double mutants, similar to its behavior when WNT responses are blocked in the otic placode. Assays of hindbrain Wnt genes revealed that only Wnt8a was reduced or absent in FGF-deficient embryos, and that even some Fgf3(-)(/)(-);Fgf10(-)(/+) and Fgf3(-)(/)(-) embryos failed to express Wnt8a, suggesting a key role for Fgf3, and a secondary role for Fgf10, in Wnt8a expression. Chick explant assays showed that FGF3 or FGF4, but not FGF10, were sufficient to induce Wnt8a. Collectively, our results suggest that Wnt8a provides the link between FGF-induced formation of the pre-otic field and restriction of the otic placode to ectoderm adjacent to the hindbrain.


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