Abstract

Mitochondrial uncoupling proteins are a proton transporter family involved in regulation mitochondrial superoxide and ATP production. Uncoupling proteins are expressed by rat spiral ganglion and vestibular ganglion cells [Hear Res 196 (2004) 39]. This study tests the hypothesis that uncoupling protein expression is up-regulated in response to the reactive oxygen species challenge imposed by kanamycin and antioxidant (2,3-dihydroxybenzoate) treatment in mice. In control C57BL/6, CBA/J and BALB/c mice, mRNA for uncoupling protein 1, uncoupling protein 2, uncoupling protein 3, Slc25a27 (uncoupling protein 4) and Slc25a14 (uncoupling protein 5/BMCP1) was expressed in the spiral and vestibular ganglia. After kanamycin-treatment (700mg/kg twice daily for 14 days s.c.), uncoupling protein 2 and uncoupling protein 3 mRNA expression increased significantly in spiral and vestibular ganglia and kidney, but was unaffected in cerebral cortex. Significant Slc25a27 (uncoupling protein 4) mRNA up-regulation was also observed in spiral and vestibular ganglia, but not in kidney or cerebral cortex. These effects were blocked by simultaneous administration of kanamycin and 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate (300mg/kg twice daily for 14 days s.c.). Western immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry confirmed the uncoupling protein 2 and uncoupling protein 3 up-regulation in inner ear. Finally, 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate treatment alone produced an upregulation of uncoupling protein 1 mRNA in the spiral ganglion, vestibular ganglion and cerebral cortex, but not the kidney. Uncoupling protein 2 and uncoupling protein 3 upregulation in the kidney and inner ear ganglia likely reflects their general role as a feedback pathway to reduce mitochondrial superoxide generation. Slc25a27 (uncoupling protein 4) upregulation in the inner ear ganglia, by contrast, is likely to be a secondary response to kanamycin-induced hair cell death. We propose that increased uncoupling protein 2, uncoupling protein 3 and Slc25a27 expression has several neuroprotective effects via reduction in mitochondrial superoxide generation and local thermogenesis, including: (1) reducing mean ROS load to prevent apoptosis, (2) increasing signal-to-noise characteristics of intracellular ROS signaling pathways (e.g. lipoxygenases, growth factor and transcription factors), (3) heat-related alteration of enzyme kinetics and (4) promotion of cell depolarization (activation of heat-gated ion channels).

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