Division of Neuropathology, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
J Assoc Res Otolaryngol. 2010 Jun;11(2):173-85. doi: 10.1007/s10162-009-0205-8. Epub 2010 Jan 27.
Sensorineural hearing deficiencies result from the loss of auditory hair cells. This hearing loss is permanent in humans and mammals because hair cells are not spontaneously replaced. In other animals such as birds, this is not the case. Damage to the avian cochlea evokes proliferation of supporting cells and the generation of functionally competent replacement hair cells. Signal transduction pathways are clinically useful as potential therapeutic targets, so there is significant interest in identifying the key signal transduction pathways that regulate the formation of replacement hair cells. In a previous study from our lab, we showed that forskolin (FSK) treatment induces auditory supporting cell proliferation and formation of replacement hair cells in the absence of sound or aminoglycoside treatment. Here, we show that FSK-induced supporting cell proliferation is mediated by cell-specific accumulation of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) in avian supporting cells and the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. By a combination of immunostaining and pharmacological analyses, we show that FSK treatment increases cAMP levels in avian auditory supporting cells and that several ERK MAP inhibitors effectively block FSK-induced supporting cell proliferation. Next, we demonstrate by Western blotting and immunostaining analyses the expression of several ERK MAPK signaling molecules in the avian auditory epithelium and the cell-specific expression of B-Raf in avian auditory supporting cells. Collectively, these data suggest that FSK-induced supporting cell proliferation in the avian auditory epithelium is mediated by increases of cAMP levels in supporting cells and the cell-specific expression of the ERK MAPK family member B-Raf in supporting cells.
感觉神经性听力缺陷是由于听觉毛细胞的丧失引起的。这种听力损失在人类和哺乳动物中是永久性的,因为毛细胞不会自发再生。在鸟类等其他动物中则不是这样。禽类耳蜗的损伤会引发支持细胞的增殖和功能成熟的替代毛细胞的产生。信号转导途径作为潜在的治疗靶点具有临床应用价值,因此,确定调节替代毛细胞形成的关键信号转导途径具有重要意义。在我们实验室的先前研究中,我们表明,forskolin(FSK)处理在没有声音或氨基糖苷类药物处理的情况下诱导听觉支持细胞增殖和替代毛细胞的形成。在这里,我们表明,FSK 诱导的支持细胞增殖是通过细胞特异性积累环腺苷单磷酸(cAMP)在禽类支持细胞和细胞外信号调节激酶(ERK)丝裂原激活蛋白激酶(MAPK)途径介导的。通过免疫染色和药理学分析的组合,我们表明 FSK 处理增加了禽类听觉支持细胞中的 cAMP 水平,并且几种 ERK MAP 抑制剂可有效阻断 FSK 诱导的支持细胞增殖。接下来,我们通过 Western blot 和免疫染色分析证明了几种 ERK MAPK 信号分子在禽类听觉上皮中的表达以及 B-Raf 在禽类听觉支持细胞中的细胞特异性表达。总之,这些数据表明,FSK 诱导的禽类听觉上皮支持细胞增殖是通过支持细胞中 cAMP 水平的增加和支持细胞中 ERK MAPK 家族成员 B-Raf 的细胞特异性表达介导的。