| Literature DB >> 32010492 |
Weiwei He1, Jintao Yu1, Yu Sun1, Weijia Kong1.
Abstract
Acoustic trauma is an important physical factor leading to cochlear damage and hearing impairments. Inflammation responds to this kind of cochlear damage stress. Macrophages, the major innate immune cells in the cochlea, are important drivers of inflammatory and tissue repair responses after cochlear injury. Recently, studies have shown that after noise exposure, the distribution, phenotype, and the number of cochlear macrophages have significantly changed, and the local environmental factors that shape macrophage differentiation and behavior are also drastically altered. However, the exact role of these immune cells in the cochlea after acoustic injury remains unknown. Here we review the properties of cochlear macrophages both under steady-state conditions and non-homeostatic conditions after cochlear acoustic injury and discuss their potential role in noise-exposed cochlea. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: immune response; inflammatory molecule; macrophage; noise induced hearing loss
Year: 2020 PMID: 32010492 PMCID: PMC6961779 DOI: 10.14336/AD.2019.0723
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Dis ISSN: 2152-5250 Impact factor: 6.745
Figure 1.Macrophage changes after noise exposure in mouse cochlea (CX3CR1. (A) In control cochlea, macrophages were relatively rare with ramified, dendritic phenotypes. (B) Seven days after noise exposure (110dB, white noise for 2 hours), cochlear macrophages were significantly increased with amoeboid morphology.