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'Escaped' proteins add to hearing loss in
elderly, UF researchers find
GAINESVILLE,
Fla.
— Age-related hearing loss is the most
common sensory disorder among the elderly.
But scientists are still trying to figure
out what cellular processes govern or
contribute to the loss.
Now a University of Florida team and
researchers from University of Wisconsin and
three other institutions have identified a
protein that is central to processes that
cause oxidative damage to cells and lead to
age-related hearing loss.
The findings help point the way toward a new
target for antioxidant therapies and will be
published online this week in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences.
One theory of aging holds that free radicals
damage components of mitochondria, the
energy center of cells. Such damage
accumulates over time, leading to a
destabilization of the mitochondria, which
leads to release of certain proteins.
"Within the mitochondria these proteins
cause life, but when they're out they're
deadly," professor Christiaan Leeuwenburgh,
Ph.D., chief of the biology of aging
division at UF's College of Medicine and a
member of the Institute on Aging.
The cell death triggered by the escaped
proteins lead to physical effects we
associate with aging, such as hearing loss.
More than 40 percent of people in the United
States older than 65 suffer from age-related
hearing loss, according to data from the
National Health Survey. It is estimated that
the condition will affect more than 28
million Americans by 2030.
"Because of the high prevalence of this
disorder, AHL is a major social and health
problem," said Shinichi Someya, first author
of the paper and a postdoctoral fellow in
the group of Tomas Prolla of University of
Wisconsin.
Age-related hearing loss involves the death
of certain sensory hair, nerve and membrane
cells in the inner ear. Since the hair and
nerve cells do not regenerate in humans,
their death leads to permanent hearing loss.
One protein called Bak is known to play a
role in the weakening of the mitochondrial
membrane. The more of the protein present,
the leakier the mitochondrial membrane
becomes, allowing harmful proteins to travel
out into the rest of the cell.
Bak is typically induced by oxidative stress
and its levels increase as people age. The
researchers wanted to see whether its
absence would prevent the age-related
hearing loss that is associated with the
death of certain sensory hair, nerve and
membrane cells in the inner ear.
Hearing tests showed that Bak-deficient
middle-aged mice were found to have hearing
levels comparable to that of young mice. In
addition, fewer of the critical hearing
cells died, compared with so-called wild
type mice that did not have the protein
deficiency.
To examine how resistant the inner ear cells
of the Bak-deficient mice were, the
researchers exposed cells to a chemical that
causes oxidative stress. Such stress
generally induces Bak expression in inner
ear cells.
There was only minor loss of cochlear cells
at all doses of the stressor chemical, in
contrast with the level observed in
wild-type animals. The researchers concluded
that Bak promotes cochlear cell death in
response to oxidative stress.
"This paper clearly shows us that oxidative
stress causes hearing loss," said Jinze Xu,
a postdoctoral fellow in Leeuwenburgh's
group, and second author of the paper.
So if oxidative stress triggers damage and
death of hearing-related cells, enhancing
the antioxidant defenses of the mitochondria
should reduce such damage.
The researchers found that both in animals
that had excess amounts of an enzyme that
scavenges reactive oxygen species, as well
as in those who were fed certain
antioxidants orally, onset of age-related
hearing loss was delayed.
"It looks like a viable biological target
that may be applicable to drug use,"
Leeuwenburgh said. "The issue is always
timing — when to start antioxidant
interventions at what combination and what
dose."
Caloric restriction, another way to reduce
oxidative damage, has previously been shown
to extend life and prevent age-related
hearing loss in the type of mice used in the
study. With the new findings, the
investigators propose that one of the ways
that restriction of calories acts is by
reducing the level of cell death that is
induced by the protein Bak.
"This extends research into life extension
by caloric restriction into a whole new area
that hasn't been looked at before," said
Huber Warner, Ph.D., associate dean for
research a University of Minnesota College
of Biological Sciences and former director
of the biology of aging program at the
National Institute on Aging, who was not
involved in the study. "The work shows that
rather than caloric restriction just having
an overall effect on metabolism of
nutrients, bak modulation can have segmental
effects on particular physical systems that
have age-related problems in humans."
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