Abstract

Mechanosensory hair cells are susceptible to apoptotic death in response to exposure to ototoxic drugs, including aminoglycoside antibiotics. The c-Jun n-terminal kinase (JNK) is a stress-activated protein kinase that can promote apoptotic cell death in a variety of systems. Inhibition of the JNK signaling pathway can prevent aminoglycoside-induced death of cochlear and vestibular sensory hair cells. We used an in vitro preparation of utricles from adult mice to examine the role of JNK activation in aminoglycoside-induced hair cell death. CEP-11004 was used as an indirect inhibitor of JNK signaling. Immunohistochemistry showed that both JNK and its downstream target c-Jun are phosphorylated in hair cells of utricles exposed to neomycin. CEP-11004 inhibited neomycin-induced phosphorylation of both JNK and c-Jun. CEP-11004 inhibited hair cell death in utricles exposed to moderate doses of neomycin. However, the results were not uniform across the dose–response function; CEP-11004 did not inhibit hair cell death in utricles exposed to high-dose neomycin. The CEP-11004-induced protective effect was not due to inhibition of PKC or p38, since neither Chelerythrine nor SB203580 could mimic the protective effect of CEP-11004. In addition, inhibition of JNK inhibited the activation of caspase-9 in hair cells. These results indicate that JNK plays an important role in neomycin-induced vestibular hair cell death and caspase-9 activation.

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