AI Article Synopsis

  • Degeneration of spiral ganglion neurons (SGNs) in the auditory nerve is linked to aging and acoustic injury, often starting with excitotoxic damage to dendrites under inner hair cells (IHCs).
  • Research shows that the transcription factor NFkappaB plays a crucial protective role against this degeneration, as mice lacking its p50 subunit experienced accelerated hearing loss and increased neuronal damage.
  • Elevated calcium-buffering proteins in these knockout mice indicate that NFkappaB may help maintain calcium balance in SGNs, thereby preventing excitotoxicity and ensuring neuron health as they age.

Article Abstract

Degeneration of the spiral ganglion neurons (SGNs) of the auditory nerve occurs with age and in response to acoustic injury. Histopathological observations suggest that the neural degeneration often begins with an excitotoxic process affecting the afferent dendrites under the inner hair cells (IHCs), however, little is known about the sequence of cellular or molecular events mediating this excitotoxicity. Nuclear factor kappaB (NFkappaB) is a transcription factor involved in regulating inflammatory responses and apoptosis in many cell types. NFkappaB is also associated with intracellular calcium regulation, an important factor in neuronal excitotoxicity. Here, we provide evidence that NFkappaB can play a central role in the degeneration of SGNs. Mice lacking the p50 subunit of NFkappaB (p50(-/-) mice) showed an accelerated hearing loss with age that was highly associated with an exacerbated excitotoxic-like damage in afferent dendrites under IHCs and an accelerated loss of SGNs. Also, as evidenced by immunostaining intensity, calcium-buffering proteins were significantly elevated in SGNs of the p50(-/-) mice. Finally, the knock-out mice exhibited an increased sensitivity to low-level noise exposure. The accelerated hearing loss and neural degeneration with age in the p50(-/-) mice occurred in the absence of concomitant hair cell loss and decline of the endocochlear potential. These results indicate that NFkappaB activity plays an important role in protecting the primary auditory neurons from excitotoxic damage and age-related degeneration. A possible mechanism underlying this protection is that the NFkappaB activity may help to maintain calcium homeostasis in SGNs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2897814PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2488-05.2006DOI Listing

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