학술논문

The local translation of KNa in dendritic projections of auditory neurons and the roles of KNa in the transition from hidden to overt hearing loss
Document Type
article
Source
Aging. 11(23)
Subject
Neurosciences
Neurodegenerative
Peripheral Neuropathy
Prevention
Rare Diseases
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Neurological
Ear
Animals
Calcium
Cochlear Nerve
Electrophysiological Phenomena
Evoked Potentials
Auditory
Brain Stem
Female
Hearing Loss
Male
Mice
Mice
Knockout
Nerve Tissue Proteins
Potassium Channels
Sodium-Activated
RNA
Messenger
hearing loss
potassium channels
age-related hearing loss
auditory neurons
axonal protein translation
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Physiology
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Developmental Biology
Language
Abstract
Local and privileged expression of dendritic proteins allows segregation of distinct functions in a single neuron but may represent one of the underlying mechanisms for early and insidious presentation of sensory neuropathy. Tangible characteristics of early hearing loss (HL) are defined in correlation with nascent hidden hearing loss (HHL) in humans and animal models. Despite the plethora of causes of HL, only two prevailing mechanisms for HHL have been identified, and in both cases, common structural deficits are implicated in inner hair cell synapses, and demyelination of the auditory nerve (AN). We uncovered that Na+-activated K+ (KNa) mRNA and channel proteins are distinctly and locally expressed in dendritic projections of primary ANs and genetic deletion of KNa channels (Kcnt1 and Kcnt2) results in the loss of proper AN synaptic function, characterized as HHL, without structural synaptic alterations. We further demonstrate that the local functional synaptic alterations transition from HHL to increased hearing-threshold, which entails changes in global Ca2+ homeostasis, activation of caspases 3/9, impaired regulation of inositol triphosphate receptor 1 (IP3R1), and apoptosis-mediated neurodegeneration. Thus, the present study demonstrates how local synaptic dysfunction results in an apparent latent pathological phenotype (HHL) and, if undetected, can lead to overt HL. It also highlights, for the first time, that HHL can precede structural synaptic dysfunction and AN demyelination. The stepwise cellular mechanisms from HHL to canonical HL are revealed, providing a platform for intervention to prevent lasting and irreversible age-related hearing loss (ARHL).