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The dual molecular identity of vestibular kinocilia bridges structural and functional traits of primary and motile cilia
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The dual molecular identity of vestibular kinocilia bridges structural and functional traits of primary and motile cilia

Zhanhong Xu, Amirrasoul Tavakoli, Samadhi Kulasooriya, Huizhan Liu, Shu Tu, Celia Bloom, Yi Li, Tirone D. Johnson, Jian Zuo, Litao Tao, …
eLife, Vol.14, 42029006
04/24/2026

Abstract

Biology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics Science & Technology
Vestibular hair cells (HCs) convert gravitational and head motion cues into neural signals through mechanotransduction, mediated by the hair bundle-a mechanically integrated organelle composed of stereocilia and a kinocilium. The kinocilium, a specialized form of primary cilium, remains incompletely defined in structure, molecular composition, and function. To elucidate its characteristics, we conducted single-cell RNA sequencing of adult vestibular and cochlear HCs, uncovering a selective enrichment of primary and motile cilia-associated genes in vestibular HCs, particularly those related to the axonemal repeat complex. This enrichment of orthologous axoneme-related genes was conserved in zebrafish and human vestibular HCs, indicating a shared molecular architecture. Immunostaining validated the expression of key motile cilia markers in vestibular kinocilia. Moreover, live imaging of bullfrog and mouse HCs from crista ampullaris revealed spontaneous kinociliary motion. Together, these findings define the kinocilium as a unique organelle with molecular features of primary and motile cilia and suggest its previously unknown role as an active, force-generating element within the hair bundle.
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https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.108071.3.sa3View
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