Cochlear transcript diversity and its role in auditory functions implied by an otoferlin short isoform

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Abstract

Isoforms of a gene may contribute to diverse biological functions. In the cochlea, the repertoire of alternative isoforms remains unexplored. We integrated single-cell short-read and long-read RNA sequencing techniques and identified 236,012 transcripts, 126,612 of which were unannotated in the GENCODE database. Then we analyzed and verified the unannotated transcripts using RNA-seq, RT-PCR, Sanger sequencing, and MS-based proteomics approaches. To illustrate the importance of identifying spliced isoforms, we investigated otoferlin, a key protein involved in synaptic transmission in inner hair cells (IHCs). Upon deletion of the canonical otoferlin isoform, the identified short isoform is able to support normal hearing thresholds but with reduced sustained exocytosis of IHCs, and further revealed otoferlin functions in endocytic membrane retrieval that was not well-addressed previously. Furthermore, we found that otoferlin isoforms are associated with IHC functions and auditory phenotypes. This work expands our mechanistic understanding of auditory functions at the level of isoform resolution.

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Liu, H., Liu, H., Wang, L., Song, L., Jiang, G., Lu, Q., … Wu, H. (2023). Cochlear transcript diversity and its role in auditory functions implied by an otoferlin short isoform. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-38621-3

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