| Literature DB >> 30187298 |
Yan Yu1,2, Bing Hu2,3,4, Jianxin Bao2,5, Jessica Mulvany2,5, Eric Bielefeld6, Ryan T Harrison6, Sarah A Neton6, Partha Thirumala7, Yingying Chen2, Debin Lei2, Ziyu Qiu5, Qingyin Zheng3, Jihao Ren4, Maria Cristina Perez-Flores8, Ebenezer N Yamoah8, Pezhman Salehi9.
Abstract
Noise is the most common occupational and environmental hazard, and noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) is the second most common form of sensorineural hearing deficit. Although therapeutics that target the free-radical pathway have shown promise, none of these compounds is currently approved against NIHL by the United States Food and Drug Administration. The present study has demonstrated that tetrandrine (TET), a traditional Chinese medicinal alkaloid and the main chemical isolate of the Stephania tetrandra S. Moore herb, significantly attenuated NIHL in CBA/CaJ mice. TET is known to exert antihypertensive and antiarrhythmic effects through the blocking of calcium channels. Whole-cell patch-clamp recording from adult spiral ganglion neurons showed that TET blocked the transient Ca2+ current in a dose-dependent manner and the half-blocking concentration was 0.6 + 0.1 μM. Consistent with previous findings that modulations of calcium-based signaling pathways have both prophylactic and therapeutic effects against neural trauma, NIHL was significantly diminished by TET administration. Importantly, TET has a long-lasting protective effect after noise exposure (48 weeks) in comparison to 2 weeks after noise exposure. The otoprotective effects of TET were achieved mainly by preventing outer hair cell damage and synapse loss between inner hair cells and spiral ganglion neurons. Thus, our data indicate that TET has great potential in the prevention and treatment of NIHL.Entities:
Keywords: Stephania tetrandra; Tetrandrine; calcium channel; hair cells; noise-induced hearing loss; spiral ganglion neurons; synapse
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30187298 PMCID: PMC6249158 DOI: 10.1007/s10162-018-00690-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Assoc Res Otolaryngol ISSN: 1438-7573