Conditional Deletion of Pten Leads to Defects in Nerve Innervation and Neuronal Survival in Inner Ear Development

All cellular phenomena and developmental events, including inner ear development, are modulated through harmonized signaling networks. Phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome 10 (PTEN), a tumor suppressor, is a major signaling component involved in cross talk with key regulators of development; i.e., Wnt, Notch, and bone morphogenetic proteins. Although Pten function has been studied in various systems, its role in inner ear development is poorly understood. Here, we used inner ear-specific Pten conditional knockout mice and examined the characteristics of the inner ear. In a detailed analysis of the phenotype, reduced cochlear turning and widened epithelia were observed. Phalloidin staining of sensory epithelium revealed that hair cell patterns were disturbed; i.e., additional rows of hair cells were discovered. The neural abnormality revealed a reduction in and disorganization of nerve fibers, including apoptosis at the neural precursor stage. Pten deficiency induced increased phosphorylation of Akt at Ser473. The elevation of inhibitory glycogen synthase kinase 3β Ser9 phosphorylation (pGSK3β) was sustained until the neuronal differentiation stage at embryonic day 14.5, instead of pGSK3β downregulation. This is the first report on the influence of Pten/Akt/GSK3β signaling on the development of spiral ganglia. These results suggest that Pten is required for the maintenance of neuroblast number, neural precursors, and differentiation in the inner ear.


Introduction
Early in auditory system development, the otic placode undergoes invagination to form otocysts, which generate a complex membranous labyrinth and ganglia through a series of morphological events via harmonized coordination of various signaling molecules such as fibroblast growth factors, Notch, bone morphogenetic proteins, and Wnt [1,2,3,4,5]. To form the cochleovestibular ganglion (CVG) complex, neuroblasts delaminate from otic epithelium into the adjacent mesoderm between embryonic day (E)9.5 and E11.5 [6,7]. After delamination, the CVG complexes are separated into the spiral and the vestibular ganglia. Spiral ganglia undergo maturation processes around E11.5 to E15.5 (with a peak at E13.5) in a basal-to-apical innervation pattern [7]. The neurites of the spiral ganglia extend toward the developing sensory epithelium (i.e., Kölliker's organ) under the guidance of neurotrophins such as brain-derived neurotrophic factor and neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) [8]. Because development of CVG neurons in the inner ear is complicated, involving a variety of developmentally regulated signaling pathways, the molecular mechanisms of spiral ganglia differentiation are not well understood.
PTEN is a key modulator of phosphatidylinositol 3-OH kinase (PI3K) signaling that involves the regulation of diverse cellular events such as growth, differentiation, and migration, and specialized developmental functions [9,10,11]. PTEN dephosphorylates phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-triphosphate (PIP3) to produce phosphatidylinositol-4,5-biphosphate, thereby directly affecting the PI3K pathway [12]. The loss of PTEN leads to PI3Khyperactivated accumulation of PIP3, which promotes Akt phosphorylation and induces phosphorylation of downstream effectors such as the mammalian target of rapamycin, forkhead box 1, and glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3) a/b [13,14,15]. Recently, GSK3 has been reported to be a regulator of neurogenesis that coordinates multiple signaling pathways involving cell proliferation and differentiation of progenitors [16,17]. During inner ear development, PI3K/Akt signaling has also been associated with insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1). Mutation of the gene encoding its receptor (Igfr) is associated with severe cochlear defects and deafness [18,19].
The function of Pten has been studied using transgenic animals. The conventional Pten knockout model exhibits early embryonic lethality, and hemizygous Pten mice undergo tumorigenesis in several organs [20,21]. Conditional Pten deletion in neural precursors leads to a significantly enlarged brain, increased proliferative capacity, and neuronal hypertrophy [22,23]. Haploinsufficiency of PTEN in subventricular zone progenitor cells results in extensive migration and resistance to hydrogen peroxideinduced apoptosis [24]. Marino et al. [25] reported that loss of Pten disrupts cell layers in the developing cerebellum, suggesting a disturbance of migration and positioning. Treatment with PTEN-antisense oligonucleotide produces short neurites with apoptosis in the PC12 cell line [26]. These results indicate that Pten may participate in regulating neural organization, connection, and outgrowth, including neurodevelopment. In the inner ear, it has been reported that Pten expression is observed in the developing cochlea and that phosphorylated Pten accumulates in hair cell and supporting cell nuclei of the aging cochlea [27,28]. Despite extensive studies of Pten-null phenotypes in various systems, little is known about the neuronal roles and mechanisms of Pten during inner ear development. In this study, we characterized the inner ear of a Pten conditional-knockout model, and showed that Pten is one of the key molecules in neuronal maintenance of the developing CVG population.

Ethics Statement
All animal procedures were conducted according to the guidelines for the use of laboratory animals and were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee at the Korea Food and Drug Administration or Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (10Sikyak30 and KCDC-017-11).

Tamoxifen Injections
To induce the conditional knockout of Pten in Neurog1 Cre/ + ;Pten loxP/loxP and Atoh Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice, tamoxifen (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA) was administered by intraperitoneal (IP) injection, as described previously [29]. To minimize the abortion rate due to multiple daily injections, we diluted the tamoxifen to 10 mg/ml in corn oil and included progesterone at half the amount of tamoxifen. One dose of 1 mg per 40 g pregnant body weight was injected with a syringe and a 26-gauge needle.

Paint-fill Analysis
Paint-fill analyses of the inner ears were performed as previously described [30]. The inner and outer lengths of paint-filled cochleae at E17.5 were calculated with ImageJ (NIH, Bethesda, MD, USA).

Immunofluorescence
Embryos were harvested and fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) at 4uC overnight, cryo-protected in 30% sucrose, embedded in OCT compound, and sectioned to a thickness of 10 mm using a cryostat. The following primary antibodies , and anti-neurofilament rabbit monoclonal (N4142, 1:100; Sigma-Aldrich) antibodies. After antigen retrieval with 10 mM citrate buffer for 20 min at 95uC, the sections were incubated in blocking solution and 10% normal donkey serum or 10% normal goat serum (Abcam) in phosphate-buffered saline with 0.2% Triton X-100 for 1 h prior to incubation with primary antibodies at 4uC overnight. Secondary fluorescent staining with Alexa Fluor 488 or Alexa Fluor 594 (1:400; Molecular Probes) was performed at room temperature for 1 h. For whole-mount immunofluorescence, dissected cochleae were fixed with 4% PFA before further blocking and antibody labeling, as described above (without the antigen retrieval step). Fluorescence images were obtained with a confocal microscope (Carl Zeiss, Göttingen, Germany) or a fluorescence microscope (Axio Imager A1; Carl Zeiss).

Neural Tracer Application
Nerve fibers were traced using NeuroVueH Red Plus (Polysciences, Warrington, PA, USA) to reveal the general pattern of innervation, as described previously [31,32]. Briefly, a dye-coated filter triangle was used to cut the eighth cranial (vestibulocochlear) nerve in E17.5 or E18.5 Pax2 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP , Neurog1 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/ loxP , and Atoh1 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice and their wild-type littermates (n.6 for each genotype). During diffusion, brains were incubated continuously in 4% PFA in 0.1 M phosphate buffer. After diffusion for 7 days at 37uC, the ears and otic ganglia were dissected away from the adjacent mesenchyme and photographed as whole mounts using an MZ16FA rhodamine filter set (Leica Microsystems, Wetzlar, Germany).

Quantification of Cells
Neuroblasts were counted in 10-mm frozen sections. Consecutive sections through the entire CVG complex and epithelium were stained with anti-NeuroD and anti-Islet1 antibodies, and signal-positive cells with a clear nucleus were counted in every other section (every 20 mm) at 2006 magnification using an Axio Imager A1 microscope (Carl Zeiss). Five to eight cochleae from four embryos of each genotype at E10.5 were analyzed. At E11.5, cleaved caspase-3-positive cells in the CVG were counted in every other section (every 20 mm) from three cochleae from three embryos. At E16.5, vestibular ganglia were enumerated in every fourth section (every 40 mm) from seven vestibules from four embryos. At E18.5, spiral ganglia were enumerated in every third section (every 30 mm) from three cochleae from three embryos.

Statistical Analysis
Data are presented as means 6 SEM. The statistical significance of differences was determined by unpaired Student's t-test. Asterisks indicate level of significance (*P,0.05, **P,0.01, and ***P,0.001).

Pten Expression Patterns during Inner Ear Development
To evaluate the role of Pten during inner ear development, we examined the expression pattern of Pten from embryonic day (E)10.5 to E16.5 in the developing inner ear ( Fig. 1). At E10.5, Pten was expressed in the CVG area but hardly detected in the inner ear epithelium (Fig. 1A, a-f). We compared Pten expression in the CVG with that of NeuroD, TrkC, and Tuj1. NeuroD is a marker of neuroblasts, and TrkC, a neurotrophin-3 receptor, is a marker for early differentiated neurons [33,34]. At E10.5 to E11.5, most Pten expression in the CVG overlapped with TrkC signals rather than being co-expressed with NeuroD (arrows in Fig. 1A, f and l). From E12.5 to E14.5, during neuronal differentiation, Pten was clearly expressed in TrkC cochlear ganglia and pan-neuronal marker Tuj1-positive ganglion neurons (Fig. 1A, m-x). Pten immunoreactivity changed slightly over the course of inner ear development. During the early stages of development, Pten is expressed in the neuronal cell body since the outgrowth of neurites is not fully completed. From E16.5 to E18.5, Pten immunoreactivity remains in the neuronal cell body but seems to be stronger in the ends of neurites than at earlier stages (arrows in Fig. S1A). At E16.5, Pten-immunopositive signals were observed in the hair cells of the cochlear epithelium (arrowheads in Fig. 1B, b). In addition, Pten signals were detected in the area of Hensen's and Claudius' cells (arrows in Fig. 1B, h), which has not been reported previously. Tuj1-positive spiral ganglia showed Pten immunopositivity (Fig. 1B, j-l). Expression of Pten was also observed in the vestibular sensory epithelia, non-sensory epithelia, and ganglion (Fig. S1B).
Characterization of the Inner ear in Pax2 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP Embryos To determine the gross morphology of the inner ear in Pax2 Cre/ + ;Pten loxP/loxP (Pten conditional knockout (cKO)) embryos, we used the paint-fill technique with a total of four embryos at E14.5 and five embryos at E17.5 (Fig. 2). At E14.5, every component of the inner ear was identifiable but the membrane surface was coarse compared to that of the wild-type. In the vestibular part, the ears of Pten cKO embryos had thickened semicircular canals and canal pouches. The endolymphatic duct and common cruses were also wider. The Pten-deleted cochlea exhibited a grossly wide morphology with a coarse pattern but with slightly reduced turning at E14.5 ( Fig. 2A, b). This widened morphology became more evident at E17.5 (Fig. 2B, b and d). Next, we measured the cochlea length at E17.5. The inner length of the Pten-deleted cochlea was decreased by 30% (69.666.2 in 4-6 cochleae, P,0.01) compared with that of wild-type cochlea, although no significant difference in outer length was observed (4-6 cochleae, P.0.95; data not shown). The coiling of the cochlea also changed slightly (Fig. 2B, d). In the wild type, the coiling of the cochlea reached 1.75 turns, but 9 of 10 cochleae in the affected ears had only 1.5 turns (Fig. 2B, c and d).
Next, we investigated cochlear sensory epithelium development and the organization of hair cells using fluorescent staining in whole-mount dissected sensory epithelium (Fig. 2C). In Ptendeleted embryos, rows of outer hair cells were staggered with an extra row of hair cells in the basal and mid turn, and the array of inner hair cells was sparsely disrupted by intruding extra inner hair cells (arrowheads in Fig. 2C, b), as assessed by phalloidin staining with p75 NTR , a marker of inner pillar cells at E18.5. In contrast, numbers of hair cells in the vestibular sensory epithelium (i.e., utricle, saccule, and ampullae) did not show statistically significant deficits in Pten cKO embryos (data not shown). Although some irregular patterning was evident in the cochlear hair cell array, the general orientations of the hair cell bundles in Pten cKO embryos were different from those in wild-type mice (Fig. S2). The p75 NTRpositive pillar cells were widened and occasionally missing (data not shown) compared to those of the wild type (arrow in Fig. 2C, b). These results indicated that Pten plays a role in the structural development of the organ of Corti.

Neuronal Inner Ear Defects in the Pten cKO Embryos
We labeled the nerve innervation patterns by inserting a NeuroVue filter strip into the eighth nerve including both afferent and efferent nerves of inner ears at E18.5 to investigate neuronal phenotype (Fig. 3). The radial bundles of wild-type cochlea were evenly distributed (Fig. 3A, a and c). In contrast, Pten cKO mice had much thicker fascicles and showed possible pathfinding defects (arrowheads in Fig. 3A, b and d). Additionally, a shortened distance between the modiolus and spiral ganglion was observed in the basal turn, indicating an increased length between the spiral ganglion and hair cells from thirteen cochleae (201% increase, P,0.05; Fig. 3A, d). Ganglia in Pax2 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/ loxP mice showed statistically significant percentage losses: 87% for spiral ganglion neurons at E18.5 (3 cochleae, P,0.01; arrows in Fig. 3C, D), and 58% for the vestibular ganglion at E16.5 (7 cochleae, P,0.01; Fig. S3).
Sensory neurons share a common progenitor with hair cells in the developing inner ear. Neural cell fate specification is decided by the expression of selector genes such as Neurog1, whereas hair cell fate is determined by Atoh1 [1,6]. A ganglion defect can be caused by alteration of neurotrophic factors (i.e., NT-3 in the cochlea) secreted from the sensory domain of the epithelium [35]. Thus, sensory neuron and hair cell development may be influenced through cross-regulation. To verify the cause of the spiral ganglion defects, we performed selective deletion of Pten in either the sensory epithelium or the ganglia using Atoh1 Cre/ + ;Pten loxP/loxP and Neurog1 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice, respectively (Figs. S4 and 3B). When ganglion-selective deletion of Pten in the Neurog1 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice was performed using tamoxifen injections from E8.5 to E11.5, badly disorganized ganglion innervation patterns resulted (arrowheads in Fig. 3B, b and d), whereas a normal innervation pattern was observed in the Atoh1 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice (data not shown). Indeed, Pten depletion in Neurog1 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice did not influence the hair cell pattern in the cochlear epithelia (Fig. S4A). Our data imply that the Pten cKO neuronal phenotype results from defects in progenitors of the Neurog1-positive neural lineage and did not influence sensory epithelial alteration.

Loss of Neurons in the Pten cKO Spiral Ganglia
We examined the neuronal markers NeuroD and Islet1 at E10.5 to understand the effect of Pten deletion on the CVG (Fig. 4). Although the Pten cKO NeuroD-positive area was not reduced compared to that of the control, the number of NeuroD-positive cells was decreased by 40% in the CVG (5 cochleae, P,0.001; Fig. 4B). This reduction was already evident in the epithelium before delamination of neuroblasts. The number of NeuroDpositive cells within the epithelium was reduced by 23% in Pten cKO mice compared to wild-type mice (8 cochleae, P,0.05; Fig. 4C). Although NeuroD-positive CVG cells were disorganized and the neuroblasts became flattened in Pten cKO mice, they were still co-localized with PCNA-positive cells, as observed in the wildtype (data not shown). At neuronal maturation after exit from the cell cycle, neurons appeared to be expressed by both Islet1-positive and NeuroD-negative cells in the CVG at E10.5 (arrows in Fig. 4A, e and f). Islet1-positive and NeuroD-negative neurons also decreased significantly compared to those in the wild-type (6 cochleae, P,0.05; Fig. 4D). Furthermore, apoptosis in the spiral ganglion increased markedly from E11.5 in Pten-deficient mice compared to that in the wild-type (Figs. 5 and 6). To identify whether the cleaved caspase-3-positive cells were neurons or Schwann cells, we determined the co-localization of apoptotic cells using immunoreactivity to Tuj1, a neuronal marker, and Sox10, a Schwann cell marker (Fig. S5). Immunofluorescence results showed that cleaved caspase-3 signals were co-localized in neurons expressed with Tuj1-positive cells but not with Sox10-positive Schwann cells (arrows in Fig. S5, B).
We performed PCNA immunofluorescence at E11.5 to examine whether the apoptotic neuronal cells were in a differentiation stage (Fig. 5B). Apoptotic neurons were distributed in the core of the non-proliferative area (arrows in Fig. 5B, f) and expressed Islet1, a neuronal marker in late blasts and immature neural precursors (arrows in Fig. 5C, f). Numbers of cleaved caspase-3-positive apoptotic cells at E11.5 were increased by 215% in Pten cKO mice compared to wild-type mice (3 cochleae, P,0.001; Fig. 5D). These results indicate that apoptotic neurons are not proliferating but rather are differentiating cells.

Signaling Pathway
We investigated Akt activity to determine the mechanisms of the Pten loss-induced spiral ganglion neuronal phenotype, as it is well known that PTEN loss promotes Akt signaling pathway activity. Akt activation was assessed by detecting Akt phosphorylation at the Ser473 residue. As shown in Figure 6, Akt phosphorylation increased in the spiral ganglion of Pten-deficient mice compared to that of wild-type mice (Fig. 6A, a-f). The relative intensity of the phospho-Akt signal was increased by 162% in Pten-deficient mice compared to wild-type mice (4 cochleae, P,0.05; Fig. 6B and C,  a). We observed Ser9-phosphorylation of the GSK3b protein in the Pten-deleted inner ear at E13.5, the neuronal differentiation stage, which was co-expressed in the phospho-Akt-positive cells of shown in a lateral view. Pten-deficient inner ears showed abnormal morphology in the vestibule, including a thickened semicircular canal and canal pouches with a widened endolymphatic duct and common cruses. There was a grossly widened morphology with a coarse pattern in the cochlea. aa, anterior ampulla; asc, anterior semicircular canal; ed/ s, endolymphatic duct and sac; la, lateral ampulla; oc, organ of Corti; pa, posterior ampulla; psc, posterior semicircular canal; s, saccule; u, utricle; A, anterior; D, dorsal. Scale bar: 50 mm. (B) At E17.5, the Pten deletioninduced morphology became more evident compared to that in the wild type (black double arrow in a, b). D, dorsal; P, posterior. Scale bar: 100 mm. (C) The morphological pattern of the epithelium was analyzed by whole-mount phalloidin with p75 NTR immunofluorescence. Ptendeficient mice showed additional rows of outer and inner hair cells, whereas wild-type mice showed three rows of outer hair cells and one row of inner hair cells at E18.5 (arrowheads in b). p75 NTR -positive pillar cells were irregular and widened compared to those in wild-type mice (arrow in b). IH, inner hair cell; OH, outer hair cell. Scale bar: 100 mm. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0055609.g002 the spiral ganglion (Fig. 6A, d and j). The level of GSK3b phosphorylation at E13.5 was sustained at E14.5 (data not shown). However, at an earlier stage, such as E11.5, GSK3b phosphorylation was detected in both wild-type and Pten-deleted mice (data not shown). The relative intensity of the phospho-GSK3b/GSK signal was increased by ,50% in Pten-deleted mice compared to wild-type mice (4 cochleae, P,0.05; Fig. 6B and C, b). The cleaved caspase-3positive cells no longer expressed phospho-Akt, phospho-GSK3b, or Islet1.

Discussion
In this study, we explored whether Pten plays a neuronal role in the regulation of development in the mouse inner ear. We found that inner ear-specific Pten deficiency resulted in severe neuronal abnormalities such as apoptosis of spiral ganglion with disorganization of nerve innervations. This is the first report of on the novel functions of Pten in regulating neuronal survival, differentiation, and axon pathfinding of neurons in the developing inner ear.

Pten is Required for the Morphogenesis of the Developing Inner Ear
Our results provide an initial characterization of the Ptendepleted inner ear. Notably, Pten-deficient mice have enlargement of the entire membranous labyrinth, which is dramatic in the endolymphatic sac ( Fig. 2A, B). This phenotype is similar to that in the inner ear of anion-exchanger Pendrin-knockout mice [36]. This dysmorphogenesis may be associated with changes in ion channels, including transporters and exchangers. Recent studies have shown that Pten regulates ion channels through PI3K/Akt signaling [37,38,39]. The molecular mechanism behind the morphological defects in the Pten-depleted inner ear, however, requires further study.
Specifically, we observed neuronal defects in the Pten-deficient inner ear (Fig. 3), leading to aberrant axon pathfinding of spiral ganglia and disruptions of the accurate connections to the hair cells. This abnormality was influenced by the substantial reduction of neuronal cell number after neural fate commitment of progenitors (Figs. 3 and 4). The disorganized radial fibers and neuronal loss in the inner ear of Pten cKO mice is similar to the phenotypes of several mutants (e.g., Brn3a 2/2 , TrkC 2/2 , or ErbB2 2/2 required for the differentiation of the spiral ganglia [40,41]) and suggests that Pten may play a role in these genemediated signaling pathway. Thus, our results suggest that Pten is a functional regulator involved in axon pathfinding of the spiral ganglia during inner ear development.

Pten Deficiency Induced Apoptosis of Differentiated Spiral Ganglia
Several studies on Pten-deficient mice have reported hypertrophic characteristics such as an enlarged brain and tumorigenesis in various organs [20,21,22,23]. In contrast, we found that Pten deficiency induced apoptosis of pre-differentiated cells but not in proliferating CVG in the developing inner ear (Fig. 5). We observed neuronal loss of spiral ganglia in Neurog1 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice (Fig. 3B), similar to Pax2 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice (Fig. 3A). This contradiction suggests that Pten has a particular function in the development of cochlear ganglia. The role of Pten in the inner ear agrees with a study in which PTEN-antisense in a neuronal cell line induced cell death with a loss of differentiating cells [26]. These results indicate that Pten deficiency promotes apoptosis in differentiating neurons in the delaminated CVG. A previous study reported that prolonged PI3K activation could trigger apoptosis via chronic induction of a cell-cycle component [42]. Thus, further experiments are required to determine the mechanism by which Pten deficiency induces apoptosis in spiral ganglia.

Pten Deficiency Causes GSK3b Phosphorylation in Spiral Ganglion Differentiation
To verify the proposed signaling mechanisms for spiral ganglion defects in Pax2 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice, we examined whether Pten deficiency (Fig. S6) upregulates Ser473-phosphorylation of Akt and triggers Ser9-phosphorylation of GSK3b (pGSK3b) in the PI3K signaling cascade. As shown in Figure 6, we found hyperactive Akt and hypoactive GSK3b by immunofluorescence in the spiral ganglion of Pten-deleted inner ears at E13.5. At E11.5, the level of pGSK3b in Pten cKO mice was similar to that of wild-type mice (data not shown). Although wild-type mice exhibited a decreased level of pGSK3b, indicating increased activation at E13.5, Pten cKO mice did not decrease the GSK3b phosphorylation level at the same developmental stage (Fig. 6). It was recently established that precise regulation of GSK3 activity is required to control neuronal differentiation. Inhibiting GSK3 facilitates or prevents axon formation and extension by regulating phosphorylation of its substrates; i.e., microtubule-associated protein 1B, collapsin response mediator protein 2, or adenoma-  Phosphorylation of Akt and GSK3b was measured by immunofluorescence staining using anti-phospho-Akt (Ser473) (pAkt) and anti-phospho-GSK3b (Ser9) (pGSK3b) antibodies at E13.5. Compared to wild-type spiral ganglia, Akt phosphorylation (green) increased substantially in Pten-deficient mice (a-f). GSK3b phosphorylation (green) was also highly expressed in the spiral ganglia of Pten-deficient mice compared to that in wild-type mice (g-l). In the absence of Pten, all pAkt and pGSK3b cells were maintained in Islet-1 positive cells (red) (a-l). Wild-type mice showed well-organized patterns of Islet-1-positive cells (a-c), whereas Ptendeficient mice showed a slightly scattered form of spiral ganglia (d-f). Cleaved caspase-3-positive apoptotic neurons (red) were sometimes co-tosis polyposis coli [43,44]. Dysregulation of GSK3b in spiral ganglion neurons may affect the neuronal phenotype of Ptendeficient mice by modulating its substrates, suggesting that it acts to inhibit axonal growth in Pten cKO mice. Further studies are required to determine whether the Pten-deficiency-induced neuronal defect is attributable to GSK3b inactivation in spiral ganglia. GSK3 plays a role in coordinating various developmental signaling pathways, including Wnt, sonic hedgehog, fibroblast growth factor, and the Notch signaling pathways [16,45,46,47]. Since GSK3b is not well controlled in Pten cKO mice, the interaction with those signaling networks may be affected during normal development of cochlear ganglia. Our results suggest that GSK3b is a regulator of neurogenesis that also maintains spiral ganglia. Thus, the results presented here provide new insights into the role of Pten/Akt/GSK3b signaling during neuronal differentiation of the developing inner ear.
In conclusion, Pten loss-induced neuronal defects reveal the novel role of Pten in the auditory ganglia during inner ear development. Pten is essential for the survival of spiral ganglia after neural fate specification and play a role in the accurate axon pathfinding of spiral ganglia to hair cells in the organ of Corti. Further investigations on the molecular mechanisms of Pten function will increase our knowledge of sensory neural development in the inner ear. Figure S1 Neuronal Pten expression during inner ear development in wild-type mice. (A) In the neurons at E10.5, E14.5, E16.5, and E18.5, the expression of Pten (red) partly overlapped with that of neurofilament (green), which was expressed in both the neuronal cell body and neuritis (arrows in b-d, f-h, j-l, and n-p). Higher magnification images of boxed regions in a-p are shown in a-p, respectively. Scale bars: 100 mm in a-p; 20 mm in a-p. (B) In the vestibule at E16.5, Pten expression (red) was detected in the MyoVIIa-positive sensory epithelium (green) (arrows in b-d), the non-sensory epithelium (arrowheads in c and d), neurofilament-positive neurites (green) (arrowheads in f-h), and vestibular ganglia (green) (arrows in j-l). Higher magnification images of boxed regions in a-l are shown in a-l, respectively. c, crista; s, saccule; u, utricle. Scale bars: 100 mm in a-l; 50 mm in a-h; 10 mm in i-l. Numbers of vestibular ganglia were significantly reduced compared to wild-type mice (7 cochleae, P,0.01). (TIF) Figure S4 Epithelial phenotype in Neurog1 Cre/+ ;Pten-loxP/loxP and Atoh1 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice. The morphological pattern of the epithelium was revealed by whole-mount phalloidin (green) with p75 NTR (red) immunofluorescence. (A) At E18.5, normally organized cochlear hair cells were seen in Neurog1 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice injected with tamoxifen between E8.5 and E11.5 (a, b). Scale bar: 20 mm. (B) Tamoxifen-inducible Pten deletion from E13.5 to E14.5 in Atoh1 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice included three rows of outer and one row of inner hair cells compared to that in wild-type mice (a, b). Scale bar: 20 mm.  Figure S6 Reduction in Pten-positive immunoreactivity in Pax2 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice. Pten immunopositivity (red) in the spiral ganglion at E16.5 was significantly decreased in Pax2 Cre/+ ;Pten loxP/loxP mice compared to wild-type mice. DAPIstained nuclei (blue) are seen in all images. SG, spiral ganglion. Scale bar: 100 mm (TIF)