星空传媒 neurobiologist, team advance understanding of how zebrafish use hair cells to detect movement; findings apply to human hearing, balance

Zebrafish

By discovering how zebrafish use their hair cells to detect distant movement, a team of 星空传媒 scientists may have found a path to help explain human hearing loss.

Even though the tiny water creatures and humans would appear to have nothing in common, the structure and function of the hair cells on zebrafish skin are nearly identical to cochlear hair cells found in the human inner ear.

In addition, both the fish and human cell receptors have a type of protein known as an 鈥渋on channel,鈥 which converts the waves that the cells detect into electrical impulses that carry useful information.

Brian McDermott

However, in humans, those hair cells are encased in the hardest bone in the body and inaccessible when the ear is responding to sound, said Brian McDermott, an associate professor of otolaryngology at 星空传媒 School of Medicine.

鈥淪o this research鈥攗sing zebrafish hair cells which are much more accessible鈥攚ill definitely help inform our understanding of human hearing and deafness,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e can now say with confidence that fish use their ion channels to escape pursuing predators in ways that are similar to the ways human ears tune to different frequencies.鈥

Otolaryngology focuses on the ear, nose and throat. McDermott, who led the new research recently , also has secondary appointments in biology, genetics and genomes sciences, and neurosciences at the 星空传媒 College of Arts and Sciences and the School of Medicine.

Understanding mechanotransduction

Scientists had already understood how hair cells functioned physiologically for hearing鈥攂ut less so at the molecular level. The hair cells are made up of a bundle of movement-sensing rods of increasing heights.

Further, McDermott said the finding also advances our understanding of 鈥渢he long-sought mechanotransduction (Mec) channel鈥 in living creatures. Mec describes the conversion of mechanical stimuli to electrical signals forwarded to the brain.

McDermott said his research team had a true 鈥渆ureka moment鈥 when, using the CRISPER-Cas9 gene-editing tool, they discovered that groups of hair cells have asymmetry. That unexpected characteristic allows the hair cells to detect movement from the back of the fish with greater sensitivity than the front.

鈥淭his shows that fish have hair cells that are actually tuned to sense different water directions,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n humans, our cochleas have hair cells that are similarly tuned to be able to hear different frequencies.鈥

That鈥檚 why this work could play a role in better understanding hearing鈥攁nd deafness鈥攊n humans, McDermott said.

Contributing authors include Kayla Kindig, 星空传媒 graduate student; Ruben Stepanyan, assistant professor of otolaryngology; and Katie Kindt, a National Institutes of Health scientist.

For more information, contact Mike Scott at mike.scott@case.edu.

This article was originally published April 13, 2023.