| Literature DB >> 33268358 |
Matthew A Ingersoll1, Emma A Malloy1, Lauryn E Caster1, Eva M Holland1, Zhenhang Xu2,3, Marisa Zallocchi2, Duane Currier4, Huizhan Liu2, David Z Z He2, Jaeki Min4, Taosheng Chen4, Jian Zuo2, Tal Teitz5.
Abstract
Hearing loss caused by noise, aging, antibiotics, and chemotherapy affects 10% of the world population, yet there are no Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drugs to prevent it. Here, we screened 162 small-molecule kinase-specific inhibitors for reduction of cisplatin toxicity in an inner ear cell line and identified dabrafenib (TAFINLAR), a BRAF kinase inhibitor FDA-approved for cancer treatment. Dabrafenib and six additional kinase inhibitors in the BRAF/MEK/ERK cellular pathway mitigated cisplatin-induced hair cell death in the cell line and mouse cochlear explants. In adult mice, oral delivery of dabrafenib repressed ERK phosphorylation in cochlear cells, and protected from cisplatin- and noise-induced hearing loss. Full protection was achieved in mice with co-treatment with oral AZD5438, a CDK2 kinase inhibitor. Our study explores a previously unidentified cellular pathway and molecular target BRAF kinase for otoprotection and may advance dabrafenib into clinics to benefit patients with cisplatin- and noise-induced ototoxicity.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33268358 PMCID: PMC7821884 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abd0561
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Adv ISSN: 2375-2548 Impact factor: 14.136