Cochlin Deficiency Protects Aged Mice from Noise-Induced Hearing Loss
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results
2.1. Cochlin Deficiency Causes Hearing Impairment at the Highest Frequencies in Aged Mice
- Vestibular evaluation. Similar to recessive COCH patients, normal vestibular function was observed in Coch−/− mice, even up to 24 months. Behavioral scorings of all mice in both groups remained within the normal control range (0 to 4) at all time points tested. No abnormal behavior was observed during the forced swimming test at the different time points in both groups.
- DPOAE. At 6 months of age, no differences were observed in DPOAE thresholds between Coch−/− (n = 8) and Coch+/+ mice (n = 12) (Supplementary Table S1A) (Figure 1A). DPOAE measurements at 12 months of age demonstrate that thresholds of Coch−/− mice (n = 30) are significantly elevated compared to thresholds of Coch+/+ mice (n = 22) at all frequencies except for 12 kHz (Supplementary Table S1A) (Figure 1B). However, at 15 months of age, DPOAE thresholds in Coch−/− mice (n = 23) are only significantly elevated at a few frequencies (5 kHz, 6 kHz, 7 kHz, 24 kHz and 28 kHz) compared to Coch+/+ mice (n = 10) (Supplementary Table S1A) (Figure 1C). When mice reached the age of 2 years DPOAE measurements demonstrated no differences in thresholds between both groups (n = 5) except at 18 kHz (p = 0.017) (Supplementary Table S1A) (Figure 1D). These results indicate that Coch−/− mice develop temporary elevated DPOAE thresholds as they age but after two years, wildtype littermates had also elevated thresholds similar to Coch−/− mice.
- ABR. Long-term follow up of Coch−/− and Coch+/+ mice to evaluate hearing function showed that Coch−/− mice had significant higher thresholds at 2 kHz and 16 kHz compared to Coch+/+ mice as assessed by ABR recordings at the age of 6 months (Supplementary Table S1B) (Figure 2A). ABR measurements performed at the age of 12 months demonstrated that hearing thresholds in Coch−/− mice were significantly elevated compared to thresholds recorded in Coch+/+ mice at all frequencies tested (Supplementary Table S1B) (Figure 2B). At the age of 15 months, ABR thresholds of Coch−/− mice were only significantly elevated at 32 kHz (Supplementary Table S1B) (Figure 2C) Hearing assessment at 24 months of age revealed that thresholds were significantly elevated at 16 and 32 kHz when compared to their wildtype littermates (Supplementary Table S1B) (Figure 2D). While recessive COCH patients suffer from congenital hearing loss, Coch−/− mice preserved their hearing function until the age of 2 years except for the high frequencies. The results of the ABR-measurements show increased thresholds in Coch−/− mice compared to wildtype, at some frequencies, depending on age. The difference seems most widespread at 12 months (all frequencies affected), while at 24 months only the high frequencies are affected.
2.2. Improved Hearing Recovery after Acoustic Overexposure with Cochlin Deficiency
- Vestibular evaluation. Vestibular rating scores remained within the normal control range (0 to 4) across all groups at all time point tested. Also, FST revealed no abnormal behavior in both Coch+/+ and Coch−/− mice.
- DPOAE. Significant interactions between genotype and time were found in the noise exposure group at high frequencies (21–32 kHz) (Supplementary Table S2A). Post-hoc tests revealed that DPOAE thresholds were significantly elevated at 48 h post noise across all frequencies except from 6 kHz and 12k kHz in the Coch+/+ mice. One week after noise trauma thresholds remained significantly elevated at all these frequencies except at 10.5 kHz and 14 kHz (Supplementary Table S2B). In the Coch−/− group, hearing thresholds were significantly elevated at all frequencies after 48 h except at 6 and 7 kHz but one week after noise trauma thresholds recovered to normal values in the mid-frequency region (10–21 kHz) (Supplementary Table S2B). These results demonstrate that hearing thresholds of Coch+/+ did not recover following noise trauma while thresholds of Coch−/− mice recovered at all frequencies except for the low frequencies (5 kHz–9 kHz) and the high frequencies (24–32 kHz). Because of the early ARHL observed in Coch−/− mice, this group had significant higher thresholds than Coch+/+ mice at baseline measurements at the high frequencies (21 kHz–28 kHz). Forty-eight hours and one week after noise exposure, there were no significant differences between both groups (Figure 3).
- ABR. A significant interaction between genotype and time was found in the noise exposure group revealing a different reaction between Coch−/− and Coch+/+ mice following noise exposure at all frequencies (supplementary data, Table S3A). Post-hoc tests were performed to compare hearing thresholds at the different timepoints in both groups. Hearing thresholds of Coch+/+ mice were significantly elevated at 48 h and one-week post-noise at all frequencies while hearing thresholds of Coch−/− mice were significantly elevated 48 h post noise at 2, 8, 16 and 32 kHz. In contrast to the Coch+/+ mice, hearing thresholds of Coch−/− mice recovered to normal values after one week except at 16 kHz (supplementary data, Table S3B). A statistically significant difference was observed at 2 kHz at baseline where Coch−/− mice had higher ABR thresholds than Coch+/+ mice (p = 0.018). In contrast, 48 h after noise exposure Coch−/− mice had significantly lower thresholds that Coch+/+ mice (p = 0.04). One week after noise exposure there was no significant difference between both groups (Figure 4A). No difference in thresholds was observed at baseline at 4 kHz, whereas 48 h and one week after noise trauma significantly higher ABR thresholds were observed in the Coch+/+ group compared to the Coch−/− group (p = 0.002 at 48 h and p = 0.006 at one week) (Figure 4B). At 8 kHz, baseline measurements revealed no difference in hearing thresholds between both group but Coch+/+ mice had significant higher thresholds after noise exposure at 48 h (p = 0.004) and one-week post-noise (p = 0.0001) (Figure 4C). Baseline measurements at 16 kHz demonstrate that Coch−/− mice had significant higher thresholds than Coch+/+ mice (p = 0.015) while after noise exposure Coch+/+ mice had significant higher thresholds that Coch−/− mice (p = 0.01 at 48 h and p = 0.03 at one week) (Figure 4D). Results at 32 kHz showed a significant difference in thresholds at baseline where Coch−/− mice had significant higher thresholds than Coch+/+ mice (p = 0.0047), after noise exposure, no differences in hearing thresholds were observed between both groups (Figure 4E). Hearing assessment indicate that Coch+/+ mice are more affected by noise exposure than Coch−/− mice as their hearing thresholds did not recover one week after noise exposure in contrast to the hearing thresholds of their Coch knockout littermates.
2.3. Immunohistochemistry
2.4. Hair Cells and Neurons Remained Intact after Noise Trauma
2.5. Noise Exposure Did Not Cause an Inflammatory Reaction in the Spiral Ligament or Spiral Limbus
2.6. Spiral Ligament Fibrocytes Were Not Affected by Noise Trauma in Coch−/− and Coch+/+ Mice
2.7. Noise Trauma Reduces Cochlin Immunoreactivity in the Spiral Ligament
3. Discussion
3.1. Otovestibular Functioning of the Coch Knockout Mouse Model
3.2. Hearing Function after Noise Trauma
3.3. Inner Ear Inflammation Following Noise Exposure
3.4. Fibrocyte Integrity
3.5. Coch Expression
3.6. Alteration in ECM Proteins May Contribute to Hearing Loss after Noise Exposure
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Study Design
4.2. Animals
4.3. Noise Exposure
4.4. Vestibular Evaluation
4.4.1. Vestibular Dysfunction Rating
4.4.2. Forced Swimming Test
4.5. Hearing Evaluation
4.5.1. Anaesthesia
4.5.2. Distortion Product Otoacoustic Emissions (DPOAE)
4.5.3. Auditory Brainstem Responses (ABR)
4.6. Euthanasia
4.7. Immunohistochemistry
4.7.1. Whole Mount Dissection of the Mouse Cochlea
4.7.2. Cryosections and Immunohistochemical Staining
4.8. Statistical Analysis
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Score | Description |
---|---|
0 | Normal behavior, normal reflex |
1 | Possibility of impaired behavior |
2 | Alteration in behavior, but limited |
3 | Important change in behavior |
4 | Extreme change in behavior |
Primary Antibodies | Secondary Antibodies |
---|---|
Rat anti-COCH (Merck Milipore (MABF267), 1:200) | Goat anti-rat Fluor 555 (Jackson (112-076-062), 1:1000) |
Rabbit anti-IBA1 (Wako (019-19741), 1:1000) | Goat anti-rabbit Fluor 555 (Abcam (ab6719), 1:1000) |
Rat anti-F4/80 (AbD Serotec (MCA497GA), 1:250) | Goat anti-rat Fluor 555 (Jackson (112-076-062), 1:1000) |
Rabbit anti-AQ1 (Sigma-Aldrich, 1:2000) | Donkey anti-rabbit Fluor 555 (Invitrogen (A31572) 1:1000) |
Rabbit anti-CTGF (Abcam(ab6992), 1:500) | Donkey anti-rabbit Fluor 555 (Invitrogen (A31572) 1:1000) |
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Verdoodt, D.; Peeleman, N.; Szewczyk, K.; Van Camp, G.; Ponsaerts, P.; Van Rompaey, V. Cochlin Deficiency Protects Aged Mice from Noise-Induced Hearing Loss. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2021, 22, 11549. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222111549
Verdoodt D, Peeleman N, Szewczyk K, Van Camp G, Ponsaerts P, Van Rompaey V. Cochlin Deficiency Protects Aged Mice from Noise-Induced Hearing Loss. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2021; 22(21):11549. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222111549
Chicago/Turabian StyleVerdoodt, Dorien, Noa Peeleman, Krystyna Szewczyk, Guy Van Camp, Peter Ponsaerts, and Vincent Van Rompaey. 2021. "Cochlin Deficiency Protects Aged Mice from Noise-Induced Hearing Loss" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 22, no. 21: 11549. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222111549
APA StyleVerdoodt, D., Peeleman, N., Szewczyk, K., Van Camp, G., Ponsaerts, P., & Van Rompaey, V. (2021). Cochlin Deficiency Protects Aged Mice from Noise-Induced Hearing Loss. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 22(21), 11549. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222111549