Literature DB >> 33569381

miRNA and mRNA Profiling Links Connexin Deficiency to Deafness via Early Oxidative Damage in the Mouse Stria Vascularis.

Giulia Gentile1, Fabiola Paciello2,3, Veronica Zorzi4,5, Antonio Gianmaria Spampinato1,6, Maria Guarnaccia1, Giulia Crispino5, Abraham Tettey-Matey5, Ferdinando Scavizzi5, Marcello Raspa3, Anna Rita Fetoni3,4, Sebastiano Cavallaro1, Fabio Mammano5,7.   

Abstract

Pathogenic mutations in the non-syndromic hearing loss and deafness 1 (DFNB1) locus are the primary cause of monogenic inheritance for prelingual hearing loss. To unravel molecular pathways involved in etiopathology and look for early degeneration biomarkers, we used a system biology approach to analyze Cx30-/- mice at an early cochlear post-natal developmental stage. These mice are a DFNB1 mouse model with severely reduced expression levels of two connexins in the inner ear, Cx30, and Cx26. Integrated analysis of miRNA and mRNA expression profiles in the cochleae of Cx30-/- mice at post-natal day 5 revealed the overexpression of five miRNAs (miR-34c, miR-29b, miR-29c, miR-141, and miR-181a) linked to apoptosis, oxidative stress, and cochlear degeneration, which have Sirt1 as a common target of transcriptional and/or post-transcriptional regulation. In young adult Cx30-/- mice (3 months of age), these alterations culminated with blood barrier disruption in the Stria vascularis (SV), which is known to have the highest aerobic metabolic rate of all cochlear structures and whose microvascular alterations contribute to age-related degeneration and progressive decline of auditory function. Our experimental validation of selected targets links hearing acquisition failure in Cx30-/- mice, early oxidative stress, and metabolic dysregulation to the activation of the Sirt1-p53 axis. This is the first integrated analysis of miRNA and mRNA in the cochlea of the Cx30-/- mouse model, providing evidence that connexin downregulation determines a miRNA-mediated response which leads to chronic exhaustion of cochlear antioxidant defense mechanisms and consequent SV dysfunction. Our analyses support the notion that connexin dysfunction intervenes early on during development, causing vascular damage later on in life. This study identifies also early miRNA-mediated biomarkers of hearing impairment, either inherited or age related.
Copyright © 2021 Gentile, Paciello, Zorzi, Spampinato, Guarnaccia, Crispino, Tettey-Matey, Scavizzi, Raspa, Fetoni, Cavallaro and Mammano.

Entities:  

Keywords:  connexins; early degeneration; hearing loss; molecular pathway analysis; oxidative stress; post-natal development; systems biology; vascular dysfunction

Year:  2021        PMID: 33569381      PMCID: PMC7868390          DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2020.616878

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Cell Dev Biol        ISSN: 2296-634X


  1 in total

1.  Connexin 30 deletion exacerbates cochlear senescence and age-related hearing loss.

Authors:  Fabiola Paciello; Veronica Zorzi; Marcello Raspa; Ferdinando Scavizzi; Claudio Grassi; Fabio Mammano; Anna Rita Fetoni
Journal:  Front Cell Dev Biol       Date:  2022-08-09
  1 in total

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