Abstract

Fibrocyte degeneration in the cochlear lateral wall is one possible pathology of age-related metabolic hearing loss (presbycusis). Within the lateral wall fibrocytes play a role in potassium recycling and maintenance of the endocochlear potential. It has been proposed that cell replacement therapy could prevent fibrocyte degeneration in the CD/1 mouse model of hearing loss. For this to work, the replacement fibrocytes would need to take over the structural and physiological role of those lost. We have grown lateral wall fibrocytes from neonatal CD/1 mice in a 3D-collagen gel culture with the aim of assessing their functional similarity to native lateral wall fibrocytes, the latter in a slice preparation and in excised spiral ligament pieces. We have compared cultured and native fibrocytes using both immuno-labelling of characteristic proteins and single cell electrophysiology. Cultured fibrocytes exhibited rounded cell bodies with extending processes. They labelled with marker antibodies targeting aquaporin 1 and calcium-binding protein S-100, precluding an unambiguous identification of fibrocyte type. In whole-cell voltage clamp, both native and cultured fibrocytes exhibited non-specific currents and voltage-dependent K+ currents. The non-specific currents from gel-cultured and excised spiral ligament fibrocytes were partially and reversibly blocked by external TEA (10 mM). The TEA-sensitive current had a mean reversal potential of + 26 mV, suggesting a permeability sequence of Na+  > K+. These findings indicate that 3D-cultured fibrocytes share a number of characteristics with native spiral ligament fibrocytes and thus might represent a suitable population for transplantation therapy aimed at treating age-related hearing loss.

Highlights

  • Hearing impairments are one of the biggest health-related problems reported worldwide

  • Cells were seeded onto collagen I gels in order to allow them to grow in a 3D environment, as would occur in Spiral Ligament Fibrocyte Marker Labelling

  • As an initial step towards this goal, we have assessed the electrical properties of cochlear fibrocytes in 3D cell culture and compared them with the electrical properties of native fibrocytes, in both slices and in excised spiral ligament

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Summary

Introduction

Hearing impairments are one of the biggest health-related problems reported worldwide. The World Health Organisation estimates that over 5% of the world’s population have debilitating hearing loss. Presbycusis can relate to sensory cell and neuronal losses (defined as sensorineural hearing loss) and cochlear lateral wall pathology (defined as metabolic hearing loss). The proportion of these different types is, as yet, still to be fully determined but from the data in Dubno et al (2013) and Schuknecht and Gacek (1993); metabolic hearing loss is at least as prevalent as sensorineural, and may even be more prevalent, Wu et al (2020) suggest that hair cell loss is the predominant factor

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