Abstract

Presbycusis, or age-related hearing loss, is a prevalent disease that severely affects the physical and mental health of the elderly. Oxidative stress and mitochondrial (mt)DNA deletion mutation are considered as major factors in the pathophysiology of age-related hearing loss. The 4977-bp deletion in human mtDNA (common deletion, corresponding to the 4834-bp mtDNA deletion in rats) is suggested to be closely associated with the pathogenesis of age-related hearing loss. Superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2), an isoform of SOD that is exclusively expressed in the intracellular mitochondrial matrix, plays a crucial role in oxidative resistance against mitochondrial superoxide. Previous research has shown that methylation of the promoter region of the SOD2 gene decreased the expression of SOD2 in marginal cells (MCs) extracted from the inner ear of rats subjected to D-galactose-induced mtDNA4834 deletion. However, the relationship between SOD2 methylation and mtDNA4834 deletion under oxidative stress remains to be elucidated. Herein, an oxidative damage model was established in the extracted MCs using hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), which increased the methylation level of SOD2 and the copy number of mtDNA4834 mutation in MCs. Decreasing the methylation level of SOD2 using 5-azacytidine, a DNA methylation inhibitor, reduced oxidative stress and the copy number of mtDNA4834 mutation and inhibited H2O2-induced apoptosis. The present work demonstrates that decreasing the methylation of SOD2 suppresses the mtDNA4834 deletion in MCs under oxidative stress and provides potential insights to the intervention therapy of aging-related hearing loss.

Highlights

  • Presbycusis or aging-related hearing loss is a prevalent disease in the elderly, most often defined as a progressive process of bilateral and symmetrical sensorineural hearing loss in response to age-associated degeneration of inner ear structures

  • Our preliminary experiments have shown that the methylation of the promoter region of the Superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2) gene decreased the expression of SOD2 in marginal cells (MCs) extracted from the inner ear of rats subjected to D-galactoseinduced mtDNA4834 deletion

  • Since lethal dose 50 (LD50) value of H2O2 for MCs is 200 μmol/l for 2 h, MCs treated with H2O2 at a concentration of 200 μmol/l for 2 h were selected for the subsequent experiments

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Presbycusis or aging-related hearing loss is a prevalent disease in the elderly, most often defined as a progressive process of bilateral and symmetrical sensorineural hearing loss in response to age-associated degeneration of inner ear structures. Oxidative stress was considered to play a crucial role in the pathophysiology of age-related hearing loss [8]. Oxidative stress can induce mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) deletion mutation, which is considered as another major factor in the pathophysiology of aging-related hearing loss [8]. Jun Li, et al.: SOD2 methylation affects mtDNA4834 under oxidative stress suggested the involvement of the mtDNA4977 deletion in its pathogenesis [11,12]. High levels of ROS in the aging process lead to the methylation of SOD2, which in turn decreases the transcription level of SOD2 [18]. Our preliminary experiments have shown that the methylation of the promoter region of the SOD2 gene decreased the expression of SOD2 in marginal cells (MCs) extracted from the inner ear of rats subjected to D-galactoseinduced mtDNA4834 deletion (not shown). The copy number of mtDNA4834 deletion in MCs was detected to investigate the effect of SOD2 methylation on the mtDNA4834 deletion in MCs under oxidative stress

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