Adult porcine (Sus scrofa) derived inner ear cells: Characteristics in in‐vitro cultures

Author:

Wijesinghe Printha12,Sastry Anand3,Hui Elizabeth12,Cogan Tristan A.3,Zheng Boyuan12,Ho Germain12,Kakal Juzer12,Nunez Desmond A.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Otolaryngology, Department of Surgery University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada

2. Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute Vancouver British Columbia Canada

3. Bristol Veterinary School University of Bristol Bristol UK

Abstract

AbstractThere is a need for an animal model that closely parallels human cochlea gestational development. This study aims to document porcine inner ear anatomy, and in vitro porcine derived inner ear cell culture characteristics. Twenty‐four temporal bone were harvested from 12 adult pigs (Sus scrofa). Six were formalin fixed and their maximal diameters were measured. The cochlea duct length was determined by the insertion length of a Nucleus 22 cochlear implant in two bones. Four formalin fixed bones were sectioned for histology. Cochlear and vestibular tissues were harvested from non‐fixed bones, cultured and characterized at different passages (P). Gene and protein expression of multipotent stem/progenitor (Nestin and Sox2), inner ear hair (Myosin VIIa, Prestin) and supporting (Cytokeratin 18 and Vimentin) cell markers were determined. The porcine cochlea was a 3.5 turn spiral. There was a separate vestibular compartment. The cochlear mean maximal diameter and height was 7.99 and 3.77 mm, respectively. Sphere forming cells were identified on phase‐contrast microscopy. The relative mRNA expression levels of KRT18, MYO7A and SLC26A5 were significantly positively correlated in cochlear cultures; and MYO7A and SLC26A5; SOX2 and KRT18; NES and SLC26A5 genes were positively correlated in vestibular cultures (p = .037, Spearman correlation [τ] = .900). Inner ear sensory and stem cell characteristics persist in passaged porcine inner ear cells. Further work is required to establish the usefulness of porcine inner ear cell cultures to the study of human inner ear disorders.

Funder

North Bristol NHS Trust

Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Histology,Biotechnology,Anatomy

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