| Literature DB >> 26339457 |
Haolin Wang1, Ning Zhao2, Kaisheng Yan1, Xiuli Liu1, Yue Zhang3, Zhijun Hong1, Mingyu Wang1, Qing Yin1, Feifeng Wu1, Yu Lei1, Xiaoyan Li1, Lin Shi1, Ke Liu3.
Abstract
Recent studies have reported that noise exposure at relatively low intensities can cause temporary threshold shifts (TTS) in hearing. However, the mechanism underlying the TTS is still on debate. Here, we report that an acoustic stimulation (100 dB SPL, white noise) induced TTS in mice, with the maximal ABR threshold elevations seen on the 4(th) day after noise exposure. On the other hand, there were no significant morphological changes in the cochlea. Further, there were paralleled changes of pre-synaptic ribbons in both the number and postsynaptic density (PSDs) during this noise exposure. The numbers of presynaptic ribbon, postsynaptic density (PSDs), and colocalized puncta correlated with the shifts of ABR thresholds. Moreover, a complete recovery of ABR thresholds and synaptic puncta was seen on the 14(th) day after the noise stimulations. Thus, our study may indicate that noise exposure can cause a decline in cochlear ribbon synapses and result in consequent hearing loss. The reduction of synaptic puncta appears reversible and may contribute to hearing restoration in mice after noise exposure.Entities:
Keywords: Noise exposure; hearing impairment; inner hair cell; ribbon synapse plasticity
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26339457 PMCID: PMC4555785
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Clin Exp Pathol ISSN: 1936-2625