Shi Xiaorui, Zhang Fei, Urdang Zachary, Dai Min, Neng Lingling, Zhang Jinhui, Chen Songlin, Ramamoorthy Sripriya, Nuttall Alfred L
Oregon Hearing Research Center, Department of Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
Oregon Hearing Research Center, Department of Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
Hear Res. 2014 Jul;313:38-46. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2014.04.006. Epub 2014 Apr 26.
Normal microvessel structure and function in the cochlea is essential for maintaining the ionic and metabolic homeostasis required for hearing function. Abnormal cochlear microcirculation has long been considered an etiologic factor in hearing disorders. A better understanding of cochlear blood flow (CoBF) will enable more effective amelioration of hearing disorders that result from aberrant blood flow. However, establishing the direct relationship between CoBF and other cellular events in the lateral wall and response to physio-pathological stress remains a challenge due to the lack of feasible interrogation methods and difficulty in accessing the inner ear. Here we report on new methods for studying the CoBF in a mouse model using a thin or open vessel-window in combination with fluorescence intra-vital microscopy (IVM). An open vessel-window enables investigation of vascular cell biology and blood flow permeability, including pericyte (PC) contractility, bone marrow cell migration, and endothelial barrier leakage, in wild type and fluorescent protein-labeled transgenic mouse models with high spatial and temporal resolution. Alternatively, the thin vessel-window method minimizes disruption of the homeostatic balance in the lateral wall and enables study CoBF under relatively intact physiological conditions. A thin vessel-window method can also be used for time-based studies of physiological and pathological processes. Although the small size of the mouse cochlea makes surgery difficult, the methods are sufficiently developed for studying the structural and functional changes in CoBF under normal and pathological conditions.
耳蜗中正常的微血管结构和功能对于维持听力功能所需的离子和代谢稳态至关重要。长期以来,耳蜗微循环异常一直被认为是听力障碍的一个病因。更好地了解耳蜗血流(CoBF)将能够更有效地改善因血流异常导致的听力障碍。然而,由于缺乏可行的检测方法以及难以进入内耳,确定CoBF与侧壁中其他细胞事件之间的直接关系以及对生理病理应激的反应仍然是一项挑战。在此,我们报告了在小鼠模型中使用薄的或开放的血管窗口结合荧光活体显微镜(IVM)来研究CoBF的新方法。开放的血管窗口能够在野生型和荧光蛋白标记的转基因小鼠模型中以高空间和时间分辨率研究血管细胞生物学和血流通透性,包括周细胞(PC)收缩性、骨髓细胞迁移和内皮屏障渗漏。另外,薄血管窗口方法可将侧壁中稳态平衡的破坏降至最低,并能够在相对完整的生理条件下研究CoBF。薄血管窗口方法还可用于基于时间的生理和病理过程研究。尽管小鼠耳蜗体积小使得手术困难,但这些方法已得到充分发展,可用于研究正常和病理条件下CoBF的结构和功能变化。