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Loss of CX3CR1 augments neutrophil infiltration into cochlear tissues after acoustic overstimulation. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The cochlea has a unique immune environment that is isolated from the body's overall immune system, but acute loud noise can still lead to immune cells entering this area.
  • Lack of the CX3CR1 gene in mice increases the number of neutrophils, a type of immune cell, entering the cochlea after exposure to loud sounds, which is linked to worse hearing loss and damage.
  • The study highlights how CX3CR1 plays a crucial role in controlling the movement of neutrophils into the cochlea, providing new insights into how these immune responses affect hearing loss due to acoustic trauma.

Article Abstract

The cochlea, the sensory organ for hearing, has a protected immune environment, segregated from the systemic immune system by the blood-labyrinth barrier. Previous studies have revealed that acute acoustic injury causes the infiltration of circulating leukocytes into the cochlea. However, the molecular mechanisms controlling immune cell trafficking are poorly understood. Here, we report the role of CX3CR1 in regulating the entry of neutrophils into the cochlea after acoustic trauma. We employed B6.129P-Cx3cr1 /J mice, a transgenic strain that lacks the gene, Cx3cr1, for coding the fractalkine receptor. Our results demonstrate that lack of Cx3cr1 results in the augmentation of neutrophil infiltration into cochlear tissues after exposure to an intense noise of 120 dB SPL for 1 hr. Neutrophil distribution in the cochlea is site specific, and the infiltration level is positively associated with noise intensity. Moreover, neutrophils are short lived and macrophage phagocytosis plays a role in neutrophil clearance, consistent with typical neutrophil dynamics in inflamed non-cochlear tissues. Importantly, our study reveals the potentiation of noise-induced hearing loss and sensory cell loss in Cx3cr1 mice. In wild-type control mice (Cx3cr1 ) exposed to the same noise, we also found neutrophils. However, neutrophils were present primarily inside the microvessels of the cochlea, with only a few in the cochlear tissues. Collectively, our data implicate CX3CR1-mediated signaling in controlling neutrophil migration from the circulation into cochlear tissues and provide a better understanding of the impacts of neutrophils on cochlear responses to acoustic injury.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jnr.24925DOI Listing

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