Hepatocyte nuclear factor ‐4 alpha in noise‐induced cochlear neuropathy

ABSTRACT Noise‐induced hearing loss (NIHL) is a problem of profound clinical significance and growing magnitude. Alarmingly, even moderate noise levels, previously assumed to cause only temporary shifts in auditory thresholds (“temporary” NIHL), are now known to cause cochlear synaptopathy and subsequent neuropathy. To uncover molecular mechanisms of this neuropathy, a network analysis of genes reported to have significantly altered expression after temporary threshold shift‐inducing noise exposure was performed. The transcription factor Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor‐4 alpha (HNF4α), which had not previously been studied in the context of cochlear response to noise, was identified as a hub of a top‐ranking network. Hnf4α expression and localization using quantitative RT‐PCR and in situ hybridization, respectively, were described in adolescent and adult mice exposed to neuropathic noise levels in adolescence. Isoforms α3 and α12 in the cochlea were also identified. At every age examined, Hnf4α mRNA expression in the cochlear apex was similar to expression in the base. Hnf4α expression was evident in select cochlear cells, including spiral ganglion neurons (SGNs) and hair cells, and was significantly upregulated from 6 to 70 weeks of age, especially in SGNs. This age‐related Hnf4α upregulation was inhibited by neuropathic noise exposure in adolescence. Hnf4α silencing with shRNA transfection into auditory neuroblast cells (VOT‐33) reduced cell viability, a...
Source: Journal of Neurobiology - Category: Neurology Authors: Tags: Research Article Source Type: research