Highlights • Auditory neurons can survive for at least two months after selective HC ablation. • Axon caliber and SGN soma size are significantly smaller after selective HC loss, but their density is ...unchanged. • Myelin surrounding auditory neurons is maintained in the absence of HCs. • HCs are indispensable for the GluR2 expression in the peripheral synapses. • The VGLUT-1 expression in the CN is unchanged two months after DT injection despite complete loss of HCs and deafness.
Cyclodextrins are sugar compounds that are increasingly finding medicinal uses due to their ability to complex with hydrophobic molecules. One cyclodextrin in particular, ...2-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HPβCD), is used as a carrier to solubilize lipophilic drugs and is itself being considered as a therapeutic agent for treatment of Niemann-Pick Type C disease, due to its ability to mobilize cholesterol. Results from toxicological studies suggest that HPβCD is generally safe, but a recent study has found that it causes hearing loss in cats. Whether the hearing loss occurred via death of cochlear hair cells, rendering it permanent, was unexplored. In the present study, we examined peripheral auditory function and cochlear histology in mice after subcutaneous injection of HPβCD to test for hearing loss and correlate any observed auditory deficits with histological findings. On average, auditory brainstem response thresholds were elevated at 4, 16, and 32 kHz in mice one week after treatment with 8,000 mg/kg. In severely affected mice all outer hair cells were missing in the basal half of the cochlea. In many cases, surviving hair cells in the cochlear apex exhibited abnormal punctate distribution of the motor protein prestin, suggesting long term changes to membrane composition and integrity. Mice given a lower dose of 4,000 mg/kg exhibited hearing loss only after repeated doses, but these threshold shifts were temporary. Therefore, cyclodextrin-induced hearing loss was complex, involving cell death and other more subtle influences on cochlear physiology.
ABSTRACT
Introduction
The vestibular system is essential for normal postural control and balance. Because of their proximity to the cochlea, the otolith organs are vulnerable to noise. We previously ...showed that head jerks that evoke vestibular nerve activity were no longer capable of inducing a response after noise overstimulation. The present study adds a greater range of jerk intensities to determine if the response was abolished or required more intense stimulation (threshold shift).
Materials and Methods
Vestibular short-latency evoked potential (VsEP) measurements were taken before noise exposure and compared to repeated measurements taken at specific time points for 28 days after noise exposure. Calretinin was used to identify changes in calyx-only afferents in the sacculus.
Results
Results showed that more intense jerk stimuli could generate a VsEP, although it was severely attenuated relative to prenoise values. When the VsEP was evaluated 4 weeks after noise exposure, partial recovery was observed.
Conclusion
These data suggest that noise overstimulation, such as can occur in the military, could introduce an increased risk of imbalance that should be evaluated before returning a subject to situations that require normal agility and motion. Moreover, although there is recovery with time, some dysfunction persists for extended periods.
Our previous study demonstrated rapamycin added to diet at 4 months of age had significantly less age-related outer hair cell loss in the basal half of the cochlea at 22 months of age compared to ...mice without rapamycin. The present study tested adding rapamycin to diet later in life, at 14 months of age, and added a longitudinal assessment of auditory brain stem response (ABR). The present study used UMHET4 mice, a 4 way cross in which all grandparental strains lack the Cdh23
allele that predisposes to early onset, progressive hearing loss. UMHET4 mice typically have normal hearing until 16-17 months, then exhibit threshold shifts at low frequencies/apical cochlea and later in more basal high frequency regions. ABR thresholds at 4, 12, 24, and 48 kHz were assessed at 12, 18, and 24 months of age and compared to baseline ABR thresholds acquired at 5 months of age to determine threshold shifts (TS). There was no TS at 12 months of age at any frequency tested. At 18 months of age mice with rapamycin added to diet at 14 months had a significantly lower mean TS at 4 and 12 kHz compared to mice on control diet with no significant difference at 24 and 48 kHz. At 24 months of age, the mean 4 kHz TS in rapamycin diet group was no longer significantly lower than the control diet group, while the 12 kHz mean remained significantly lower. Mean TS at 24 and 48 kHz in the rapamycin diet group became significantly lower than in the control diet group at 24 months. Hair cell counts at 24 months showed large loss in the apical half of most rapamycin and control diet mice cochleae with no significant difference between groups. There was only mild outer hair cell loss in the basal half of rapamycin and control diet mice cochleae with no significant difference between groups. The results show that a later life addition of rapamycin can decrease age-related hearing loss in the mouse model, however, it also suggests that this decrease is a delay/deceleration rather than a complete prevention.
The auditory sensory epithelium in non-mammalian vertebrates can replace lost hair cells by transdifferentiation of supporting cells, but this regenerative ability is lost in the mammalian cochlea. ...Future cell-based treatment of hearing loss may depend on stem cell transplantation or on transdifferentiation of endogenous cells in the cochlea. For both approaches, identification of cells with stem cell features within the mature cochlea may be useful. Here we use a Nestin-β-gal mouse to examine the presence of Nestin positive cells in the mature auditory epithelium, and determine how overstimulation of the ear impacts these cells. Nestin positive cells were found in the apical turn of the cochlea lateral to the outer hair cell area. This pattern of expression persisted into mature age. The area of Nestin positive cells was increased after the noise lesion. This increase in area coincided with an increase in expression of the Nestin mRNA. The data suggest that cells with potential stem cell features remain in the mature mammalian cochlea, restricted to the apical turn, and that an additional set of signals is necessary to trigger their contribution to cell replacement therapy in the ear. As such, this population of cells could serve to generate cochlear stem cells for research and potential therapy, and may be a target for treatments based on induced transdifferentiation of endogenous cochlear cells.
This study is the first to demonstrate that macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF), an immune system 'inflammatory' cytokine that is released by the developing otocyst, plays a role in ...regulating early innervation of the mouse and chick inner ear. We demonstrate that MIF is a major bioactive component of the previously uncharacterized otocyst-derived factor, which directs initial neurite outgrowth from the statoacoustic ganglion (SAG) to the developing inner ear. Recombinant MIF acts as a neurotrophin in promoting both SAG directional neurite outgrowth and neuronal survival and is expressed in both the developing and mature inner ear of chick and mouse. A MIF receptor, CD74, is found on both embryonic SAG neurons and adult mouse spiral ganglion neurons. Mif knockout mice are hearing impaired and demonstrate altered innervation to the organ of Corti, as well as fewer sensory hair cells. Furthermore, mouse embryonic stem cells become neuron-like when exposed to picomolar levels of MIF, suggesting the general importance of this cytokine in neural development.
•Small arms fire-like noise induced loss of inner hair cell synaptic ribbons in rat cochleae.•Small arms fire-like noise also reduced Gap Detection many noise-induced rats, this can be associated ...with Tinnitus.•Noise-exposed rats with reduced Gap Detection had greater loss of hair cell ribbons than those with normal Gap Detection.•Piribedil, memantine, and ACEMg treatment significantly reduced the noise-induced loss of ribbons.•A treatment induced reduction in incidence of noise-induced reduced Gap Detection did not reach significance.
A noise-induced loss of inner hair cell (IHC) – auditory nerve synaptic connections has been suggested as a factor that can trigger the progression of maladaptive plastic changes leading to noise-induced tinnitus. The present study used a military relevant small arms fire (SAF)-like noise (50 biphasic impulses over 2.5 min at 152 dB SPL given unilaterally to the right ear) to induce loss (∼1/3) of IHC synaptic ribbons (associated with synapse loss) in rat cochleae with only minor (less than 10%) loss of outer hair cells. Approximately half of the noise-exposed rats showed poorer Gap Detection post-noise, a behavioral indication suggesting the presence of tinnitus. There was significantly greater loss of IHC ribbons in noise-exposed rats with reduced Gap Detection compared to noise-exposed rats retaining normal Gap Detection. We have previously shown systemic administration of piribedil, memantine, and/or ACEMg significantly reduced loss of IHC ribbons induced by a 3 h 4 kHz octave band 117 dB (SPL) noise. The present study examined if this treatment would also reduce ribbon loss from the SAF-like noise exposure and if this would prevent the reduced Gap Detection. As in the previous study, piribedil, memantine, and ACEMg treatment significantly reduced the noise-induced loss of ribbons, such that it was no longer significantly different from normal. However, it did not prevent development of the reduced Gap Detection indication of tinnitus in all treated noise-exposed rats, reducing the incidence but not reaching significance.
•A single exposure to noise given to young mice that does not cause immediate permanent hearing loss will accelerate and enhance later age-related hearing loss.•The effects of noise in youth on ...age-related hearing loss is largely an acceleration, with age-related hearing appearing earlier.•Different noise exposure conditions cause different paces and patterns of accelerated age-related hearing loss.
Many factors contribute to hearing loss commonly found in older adults. There can be natural aging of cellular elements, hearing loss previously induced by environmental factors such as noise or ototoxic drugs as well as genetic and epigenetic influences. Even when noise overstimulation does not immediately cause permanent hearing loss it has recently been shown to increase later age-related hearing loss (ARHL). The present study further investigated this condition in the UMHET4 mouse model by comparing a small arms fire (SAF)-like impulse noise exposure that has the greatest immediate effect in more apical cochlear regions to a broadband noise (BBN) exposure that has the greatest immediate effect in more basal cochlear regions. Both noise exposures were given at levels that only induced temporary auditory brainstem response (ABR) threshold shifts (TS). Mice were noise exposed at 5 months of age followed by ABR assessment at 6, 12, 18, 21, and 24 months of age. Mice that received the SAF-like impulse noise had accelerated age-related TS at 4 kHz that appeared at 12 months of age (significantly increased compared to no-noise controls). This increased TS at 4 kHz continued at 18 and 21 months but was no longer significantly greater at 24 months of age. The SAF-like impulse noise also induced a significantly greater mean TS at 48 kHz, first appearing at 18 months of age and continuing to be significantly greater than controls at 21 and 24 months. The BBN induced a different pace and pattern of enhanced age-related ABR TS. The mean TS for the BBN group first became significantly greater than controls at 18 months of age and only at 48 kHz. It remained significantly greater than controls at 21 months but was no longer significantly greater at 24 months of age. Results, therefore, show different influences on ARHL for the two different noise exposure conditions. Noise-induced enhancement appears to provide more an acceleration than overall total increase in ARHL.
Abstract Oxidative stress has been linked to noise- and drug-induced as well as age-related hearing loss. Antioxidants can attenuate the decline of cochlear structure and function after exposure to ...noise or drugs, but it is debated as to whether they can protect from age-related hearing loss. In a long-term longitudinal study, 10-month-old female CBA/J mice were placed on either a control or antioxidant-enriched diet and monitored through 24 months of age. Supplementation with vitamins A, C, and E, L-carnitine, and α-lipoic acid significantly increased the antioxidant capacity of inner ear tissues. However, by 24 months of age, the magnitude of hearing loss was equal between the two groups. Likewise, there were no significant differences in hair cell loss or degeneration of spiral ganglion cells. We conclude that dietary manipulations can alter cochlear antioxidant capacity but do not ameliorate age-related sensorineural hearing loss in the CBA/J mouse.