Abstract
Hearing loss is the third most common chronic health condition in the United States and largely results from damage to sensory hair cells. Major causes of hair cell damage include aging, noise exposure, and medications such as aminoglycoside antibiotics. Due to their potent antibacterial properties and low cost, aminoglycosides are often used for the treatment of gram-negative bacterial infections, surpassing expensive antibiotics with fewer harmful side effects. However, their use is coupled with permanent hearing loss in over 20% of patients requiring these life-sustaining antibiotics. There are currently no FDA-approved drugs that prevent hearing loss from aminoglycosides. A previous study by our group identified the plant alkaloid berbamine as a strong protectant of zebrafish lateral line hair cells from aminoglycoside damage. This effect is likely due to a block of the mechanotransduction channel, thereby reducing aminoglycoside entry into hair cells. The present study builds on this previous work, investigating 16 synthetic berbamine analogs to determine the core structure underlying their protective mechanisms. We demonstrate that nearly all of these berbamine analogs robustly protect lateral line hair cells from ototoxic damage, with ED50 values nearing 20 nM for the most potent analogs. Of the 16 analogs tested, nine strongly protected hair cells from both neomycin and gentamicin damage, while one conferred strong protection only from gentamicin. These data are consistent with prior research demonstrating that different aminoglycosides activate somewhat distinct mechanisms of damage. Regardless of the mechanism, protection required the entire berbamine scaffold. Phenolic alkylation or acylation with lipophilic groups appeared to improve protection compared to berbamine, implying that these structures may be responsible for mitigating damage. While the majority of analogs confer protection by blocking aminoglycoside uptake, 18% of our analogs also confer protection via an uptake-independent mechanism; these analogs exhibited protection when delivered after aminoglycoside removal. Based on our studies, berbamine analogs represent a promising tool to further understand the pathology of aminoglycoside-induced hearing loss and can serve as lead compounds to develop otoprotective drugs.
Highlights
Sensory hair cells can be damaged from aging, intense noise exposure, and medications such as aminoglycoside antibiotics
We demonstrate that alkylated and acylated berbamine analogs attenuate aminoglycoside-induced hair cell death in the zebrafish lateral line
We examined a fluorescently tagged berbamine analog to determine if analogs can enter hair cells
Summary
Sensory hair cells can be damaged from aging, intense noise exposure, and medications such as aminoglycoside antibiotics. In mammals, damaged hair cells are not replaced, which can result in permanent hearing loss. In humans, hearing loss can be devastating since it can lead to social isolation and decreased employment opportunities (Raviv et al, 2010; Jung and Bhattacharyya, 2012; Bainbridge and Wallhagen, 2014; Mick et al, 2014). Despite the adverse effects of aminoglycosides on hearing, they are widely used in developing nations due to their potent antibacterial properties and low cost, surpassing expensive antibiotics with fewer harmful side effects. There are no FDA-approved drugs that prevent aminoglycosideinduced hearing loss. Our work seeks to develop a drug therapy that robustly prevents aminoglycoside-induced hearing loss by modifying the chemical scaffold of a naturally occurring otoprotective compound
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