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Characterization of a unique cell population marked by transgene expression in the adult cochlea of nestin‐CreERT2/tdTomato‐reporter mice
Authors:Cynthia L. Chow  Weixiang Guo  Parul Trivedi  Xinyu Zhao  Samuel P. Gubbels
Affiliation:1. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Wisconsin‐Madison, Madison, Wisconsin;2. Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin‐Madison, Madison, Wisconsin;3. Department of Neuroscience, University of Wisconsin‐Madison, Madison, Wisconsin;4. Department of Surgery, Division of Otolaryngology‐Head and Neck Surgery, University of Wisconsin‐Madison, Madison, Wisconsin
Abstract:Hair cells in the adult mammalian cochlea cannot spontaneously regenerate after damage, resulting in the permanency of hearing loss. Stem cells have been found to be present in the cochlea of young rodents; however, there has been little evidence for their existence into adulthood. We used nestin‐CreERT2/tdTomato‐reporter mice to trace the lineage of putative nestin‐expressing cells and their progeny in the cochleae of adult mice. Nestin, an intermediate filament found in neural progenitor cells during early development and adulthood, is regarded as a multipotent and neural stem cell marker. Other investigators have reported its presence in postnatal and young adult rodents; however, there are discrepancies among these reports. Using lineage tracing, we documented a robust population of tdTomato‐expressing cells and evaluated these cells at a series of adult time points. Upon activation of the nestin promoter, tdTomato was observed just below and medial to the inner hair cell layer. All cells colocalized with the stem cell and cochlear‐supporting‐cell marker Sox2 as well as the supporting cell and Schwann cell marker Sox10; however, they did not colocalize with the Schwann cell marker Krox20, spiral ganglion marker NF200, nor glial fibrillary acidic acid (GFAP)‐expressing supporting cell marker. The cellular identity of this unique population of tdTomato‐expressing cells in the adult cochlea of nestin‐CreERT2/tdTomato mice remains unclear; however, these cells may represent a type of supporting cell on the neural aspect of the inner hair cell layer. J. Comp. Neurol. 523:1474–1487, 2015. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:inner ear  supporting cell  regeneration  stem cell  mouse  AB_10015251  AB_10013382  AB_2286684  AB_2195374  AB_306298  AB_10064079  AB_149792  AB_396354  AB_2251134  AB_2314882
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