ATP-gated ion channels mediate adaptation to elevated sound levels

作者:Housley Gary D*; Morton Jones Rachel; Vlajkovic Srdjan M; Telang Ravindra S; Paramananthasivam Vinthiya; Tadros Sherif F; Wong Ann Chi Yan; Froud Kristina E; Cederholm Jennie M E; Sivakumaran Yogeesan; Snguanwongchai Peerawuth; Khakh Baljit S; Cockayne Debra A; Thorne Peter R; Ryan Allen F
来源:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013, 110(18): 7494-7499.
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1222295110

摘要

The sense of hearing is remarkable for its auditory dynamic range, which spans more than 1012 in acoustic intensity. The mechanisms that enable the cochlea to transduce high sound levels without damage are of key interest, particularly with regard to the broad impact of industrial, military, and recreational auditory overstimulation on hearing disability. We show that ATP-gated ion channels assembled from P2X(2) receptor subunits in the cochlea are necessary for the development of temporary threshold shift (TTS), evident in auditory brainstem response recordings as sound levels rise. In mice null for the P2RX2 gene (encoding the P2X(2) receptor subunit), sustained 85-dB noise failed to elicit the TTS that wild-type (WT) mice developed. ATP released from the tissues of the cochlear partition with elevation of sound levels likely activates the broadly distributed P2X(2) receptors on epithelial cells lining the endolymphatic compartment. This purinergic signaling is supported by significantly greater noise-induced suppression of distortion product otoacoustic emissions derived from outer hair cell transduction and decreased suprathreshold auditory brainstem response input/output gain in WT mice compared with P2RX2-null mice. At higher sound levels (%26gt;= 95 dB), additional processes dominated TTS, and P2RX2-null mice were more vulnerable than WT mice to permanent hearing loss due to hair cell synapse disruption. P2RX2-null mice lacked ATP-gated conductance across the cochlear partition, including loss of ATP-gated inward current in hair cells. These data indicate that a significant component of TTS represents P2X(2) receptordependent purinergic hearing adaptation that underpins the upper physiological range of hearing.

  • 出版日期2013-4-30