Hair Cell Regeneration after ATOH1 Gene Therapy in the Cochlea of Profoundly Deaf Adult Guinea Pigs

dc.contributor.authorAtkinson, Patrick
dc.contributor.authorWise, Andrew
dc.contributor.authorFlynn, Brianna
dc.contributor.authorNayagam, Bryony
dc.contributor.authorRichardson, Rachael
dc.date.accessioned2014-08-25T01:42:35Z
dc.date.available2014-08-25T01:42:35Z
dc.date.issued2014-07-18
dc.description.abstractThe degeneration of hair cells in the mammalian cochlea results in permanent sensorineural hearing loss. This study aimed to promote the regeneration of sensory hair cells in the mature cochlea and their reconnection with auditory neurons through the introduction of ATOH1, a transcription factor known to be necessary for hair cell development, and the introduction of neurotrophic factors. Adenoviral vectors containing ATOH1 alone, or with neurotrophin-3 and brain derived neurotrophic factor were injected into the lower basal scala media of guinea pig cochleae four days post ototoxic deafening. Guinea pigs treated with ATOH1 gene therapy, alone, had a significantly greater number of cells expressing hair cell markers compared to the contralateral non-treated cochlea when examined 3 weeks post-treatment. This increase, however, did not result in a commensurate improvement in hearing thresholds, nor was there an increase in synaptic ribbons, as measured by CtBP2 puncta after ATOH1 treatment alone, or when combined with neurotrophins. However, hair cell formation and synaptogenesis after co-treatment with ATOH1 and neurotrophic factors remain inconclusive as viral transduction was reduced due to the halving of viral titres when the samples were combined. Collectively, these data suggest that, whilst ATOH1 alone can drive non-sensory cells towards an immature sensory hair cell phenotype in the mature cochlea, this does not result in functional improvements after aminoglycoside-induced deafness.en_US
dc.description.sponsorshipThe authors wish to acknowledge the generous support of the Garnett Passe and Rodney Williams Memorial Foundation (PJA), the National Health and Medical Research Council (GNT1024350) (RTR), Action on Hearing Loss (RTR), the Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital (PJA) and the University of Melbourne (PJA). The Bionics Institute acknowledges the support it receives from the Victorian Government through its Operational Infrastructure Support Program.en_US
dc.identifier.citation2. Atkinson, P. J., Wise, A. K., Flynn, B. O., Nayagam, B. A. & Richardson, R. T. (2014). Hair cell regeneration after ATOH1 gene therapy in the cochlea of profoundly deaf adult guinea pigs. PLoS ONE 9, e102077.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://repository.bionicsinstitute.org:8080/handle/123456789/90
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherPLoS ONEen_US
dc.subjectHair Cell Regenerationen_US
dc.subjectGene Therapyen_US
dc.subjectATOH1en_US
dc.subjectProfound Deafnessen_US
dc.titleHair Cell Regeneration after ATOH1 Gene Therapy in the Cochlea of Profoundly Deaf Adult Guinea Pigsen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
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