| Literature DB >> 30008743 |
Guangfei Li1, Dan You1, Jiaoyao Ma1, Wen Li1, Huawei Li1,2, Shan Sun1.
Abstract
Sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSHL) is a clinically common acute symptom in otolaryngology. Although the incidence of SSHL has increased around the world in recent years, the etiology of the disease is still unclear. It has been reported that infections, ototoxic drugs, membrane labyrinth rupture, carcinomas, circulatory system diseases, autoimmune diseases, brain lesions, mental diseases, congenital or inherited diseases, and so on, are all risk factors for SSHL. Here, we discuss the autoimmune mechanisms behind SSHL, which might be induced by type II-IV allergic reactions. We also introduce the main immunosuppressive medications that have been used to treat SSHL, which will help us to identify potential targets for immune therapy.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30008743 PMCID: PMC6020465 DOI: 10.1155/2018/7691473
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
The main autoimmune target antigens in the inner ear.
| Inner ear antigen | Distribution | References |
|---|---|---|
| Collagen type II | In the subepithelial layer of the endolymphatic duct and spiral ligament. | [ |
| HSP-70 | Hair cells and supporting cells. | [ |
|
| Hair cells, supporting cells, the spiral ligament of the stria vascularis, and the spiral ganglion. | [ |
| Cochlin | In the regions of the fibrocytes of the spiral limbus and the spiral ligament and in the cochlear and vestibular labyrinth. | [ |
| Beta-tectorin | Hair cells in the basal region of the hair bundle lying over the apical surface of the auditory epithelium, in the basilar papilla, in the clear cells and the cuboidal cells, and in the striolar region of the lagena macula. | [ |
| Kresge Hearing Research Institute-3 (KHRI-3) | This is a protein specific to the inner ear and is expressed in the saccular wall cells and transitional epithelial cells in the utricle and ampules, by cells in the endolymphatic sac, and by supporting cells. | [ |
The innate immune cells and adaptive immune cells in the inner ear.
| Immune cells | Function | Distribution | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Innate immune cells | Macrophages | Promote the proliferation of T cells and B cells; | Endolymphatic sac and subepithelial and endoluminal space and the scala tympani and scala vestibuli. | [ | |
| Granulocytes | Anti-inflammatory, release of some inflammatory factors. | In the scala tympani, in the scala vestibuli from the basal turn to the apex, and in the modiolus. | [ | ||
|
| |||||
| Adaptive immune cells | B cells | Antigen identification and presentation. | Peripheral circulation system, infiltrating into the endolymph and perilymph of the scala tympani and the scala vestibule and the endolymphatic sac. | [ | |
| Helper T cells | Th1 cells | Mediate cellular immunity; | From the peripheral circulation system, infiltrate into the scala tympani, the scala vestibuli, and the perisaccular connective tissue of the endolymphatic sac and the modiolar vessels. | [ | |
| Th2 cells | Mediate humoral immunity; | ||||
| Th17 cells | Secrete inflammatory cytokines IL-17 and IL-22; | ||||
| Suppressor T cells | CD4+/CD25+ Th cells | Negative regulator of immune response; | From the circulation, infiltrate into the modiolus, the scala tympani, and the perisaccular connective tissue of the endolymphatic sac. | [ | |
| Antigen-specific regulatory T cells (inducible regulatory T cells (iTregs)) | |||||
| Lymphocytes | Anti-inflammatory | In the scala tympani, in all turns of the cochlea, and in smaller numbers in the scala vestibuli. | [ | ||
Figure 1The distribution of immune cells in the inner ear when the immune response is initiated.
Figure 2The mechanisms of inner ear damage by the type II–IV allergic reactions.