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Douglas A. Cotanche

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  64
Citations -  3610

Douglas A. Cotanche is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hair cell & Cochlea. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 64 publications receiving 3454 citations. Previous affiliations of Douglas A. Cotanche include University of Massachusetts Medical School & Vertex Pharmaceuticals.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Regeneration of Sensory Hair Cells after Acoustic Trauma

TL;DR: This work has shown that after acoustic trauma, injured sensory cells in the mature cochlea of the chicken are replaced and trauma-induced division of normally postmitotic cells may lead to recovery from profound hearing loss.
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Hair cell regeneration in the avian auditory epithelium

TL;DR: Current knowledge about supporting cell properties is reviewed and candidate signaling molecules for regulating supporting cell behavior, in quiescence and after damage are discussed, suggesting they are differentially regulated.
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Identification of the timing of S phase and the patterns of cell proliferation during hair cell regeneration in the chick cochlea

TL;DR: It is suggested that progenitors within the sensory epithelium may undergo several rounds of division to generate the appropriate number of new hair cells and supporting cells in chick basilar papilla.
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Direct transdifferentiation gives rise to the earliest new hair cells in regenerating avian auditory epithelium.

TL;DR: The identical morphology of regenerating HCs from both pathways suggests that once HC fate is established, all new HCs follow similar cellular processes during differentiation and reorganization into the regenerated epithelium.
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Hair cell regeneration in the bird cochlea following noise damage or ototoxic drug damage

TL;DR: This review examines the structural events that lead to hair cell loss after noise damage and ototoxic drug damage as well as the processes involved in the recovery of the epithelium and the regeneration of the hair cells and investigates the evidence for the hypothesis that supporting cells in the basilar papilla act as the progenitor cells for regenerated hair cells.