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A New Approach to Treating Neurodegenerative Otologic Disorders

Hearing loss, the most common neurological disorder and the fourth leading cause of years lived with disability, can have profound effects on quality of life. The impact of this “invisible disability,” with significant consequences, economic and personal, is most substantial in low- and middle-incom...

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Autores principales: Moos, Walter H., Faller, Douglas V., Glavas, Ioannis P., Harpp, David N., Irwin, Michael H., Kanara, Iphigenia, Pinkert, Carl A., Powers, Whitney R., Steliou, Kosta, Vavvas, Demetrios G., Kodukula, Krishna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6069589/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30069423
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/biores.2018.0017
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author Moos, Walter H.
Faller, Douglas V.
Glavas, Ioannis P.
Harpp, David N.
Irwin, Michael H.
Kanara, Iphigenia
Pinkert, Carl A.
Powers, Whitney R.
Steliou, Kosta
Vavvas, Demetrios G.
Kodukula, Krishna
author_facet Moos, Walter H.
Faller, Douglas V.
Glavas, Ioannis P.
Harpp, David N.
Irwin, Michael H.
Kanara, Iphigenia
Pinkert, Carl A.
Powers, Whitney R.
Steliou, Kosta
Vavvas, Demetrios G.
Kodukula, Krishna
author_sort Moos, Walter H.
collection PubMed
description Hearing loss, the most common neurological disorder and the fourth leading cause of years lived with disability, can have profound effects on quality of life. The impact of this “invisible disability,” with significant consequences, economic and personal, is most substantial in low- and middle-income countries, where >80% of affected people live. Given the importance of hearing for communication, enjoyment, and safety, with up to 500 million affected globally at a cost of nearly $800 billion/year, research on new approaches toward prevention and treatment is attracting increased attention. The consequences of noise pollution are largely preventable, but irreversible hearing loss can result from aging, disease, or drug side effects. Once damage occurs, treatment relies on hearing aids and cochlear implants. Preventing, delaying, or reducing some degree of hearing loss may be possible by avoiding excessive noise and addressing major contributory factors such as cardiovascular risk. However, given the magnitude of the problem, these interventions alone are unlikely to be sufficient. Recent advances in understanding principal mechanisms that govern hearing function, together with new drug discovery paradigms designed to identify efficacious therapies, bode well for pharmaceutical intervention. This review surveys various causes of loss of auditory function and discusses potential neurological underpinnings, including mitochondrial dysfunction. Mitochondria mitigate cell protection, survival, and function and may succumb to cumulative degradation of energy production and performance; the end result is cell death. Energy-demanding neurons and vestibulocochlear hair cells are vulnerable to mitochondrial dysfunction, and hearing impairment and deafness are characteristic of neurodegenerative mitochondrial disease phenotypes. Beyond acting as cellular powerhouses, mitochondria regulate immune responses to infections, and studies of this phenomenon have aided in identifying nuclear factor kappa B and nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2/antioxidant response element signaling as targets for discovery of otologic drugs, respectively, suppressing or upregulating these pathways. Treatment with free radical scavenging antioxidants is one therapeutic approach, with lipoic acid and corresponding carnitine esters exhibiting improved biodistribution and other features showing promise. These compounds are also histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors, adding epigenetic modulation to the mechanistic milieu through which they act. These data suggest that new drugs targeting mitochondrial dysfunction and modulating epigenetic pathways via HDAC inhibition or other mechanisms hold great promise.
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spelling pubmed-60695892018-08-01 A New Approach to Treating Neurodegenerative Otologic Disorders Moos, Walter H. Faller, Douglas V. Glavas, Ioannis P. Harpp, David N. Irwin, Michael H. Kanara, Iphigenia Pinkert, Carl A. Powers, Whitney R. Steliou, Kosta Vavvas, Demetrios G. Kodukula, Krishna Biores Open Access Article Hearing loss, the most common neurological disorder and the fourth leading cause of years lived with disability, can have profound effects on quality of life. The impact of this “invisible disability,” with significant consequences, economic and personal, is most substantial in low- and middle-income countries, where >80% of affected people live. Given the importance of hearing for communication, enjoyment, and safety, with up to 500 million affected globally at a cost of nearly $800 billion/year, research on new approaches toward prevention and treatment is attracting increased attention. The consequences of noise pollution are largely preventable, but irreversible hearing loss can result from aging, disease, or drug side effects. Once damage occurs, treatment relies on hearing aids and cochlear implants. Preventing, delaying, or reducing some degree of hearing loss may be possible by avoiding excessive noise and addressing major contributory factors such as cardiovascular risk. However, given the magnitude of the problem, these interventions alone are unlikely to be sufficient. Recent advances in understanding principal mechanisms that govern hearing function, together with new drug discovery paradigms designed to identify efficacious therapies, bode well for pharmaceutical intervention. This review surveys various causes of loss of auditory function and discusses potential neurological underpinnings, including mitochondrial dysfunction. Mitochondria mitigate cell protection, survival, and function and may succumb to cumulative degradation of energy production and performance; the end result is cell death. Energy-demanding neurons and vestibulocochlear hair cells are vulnerable to mitochondrial dysfunction, and hearing impairment and deafness are characteristic of neurodegenerative mitochondrial disease phenotypes. Beyond acting as cellular powerhouses, mitochondria regulate immune responses to infections, and studies of this phenomenon have aided in identifying nuclear factor kappa B and nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2/antioxidant response element signaling as targets for discovery of otologic drugs, respectively, suppressing or upregulating these pathways. Treatment with free radical scavenging antioxidants is one therapeutic approach, with lipoic acid and corresponding carnitine esters exhibiting improved biodistribution and other features showing promise. These compounds are also histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors, adding epigenetic modulation to the mechanistic milieu through which they act. These data suggest that new drugs targeting mitochondrial dysfunction and modulating epigenetic pathways via HDAC inhibition or other mechanisms hold great promise. Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. 2018-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC6069589/ /pubmed/30069423 http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/biores.2018.0017 Text en © Walter H. Moos et al. 2018; Published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. This Open Access article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Moos, Walter H.
Faller, Douglas V.
Glavas, Ioannis P.
Harpp, David N.
Irwin, Michael H.
Kanara, Iphigenia
Pinkert, Carl A.
Powers, Whitney R.
Steliou, Kosta
Vavvas, Demetrios G.
Kodukula, Krishna
A New Approach to Treating Neurodegenerative Otologic Disorders
title A New Approach to Treating Neurodegenerative Otologic Disorders
title_full A New Approach to Treating Neurodegenerative Otologic Disorders
title_fullStr A New Approach to Treating Neurodegenerative Otologic Disorders
title_full_unstemmed A New Approach to Treating Neurodegenerative Otologic Disorders
title_short A New Approach to Treating Neurodegenerative Otologic Disorders
title_sort new approach to treating neurodegenerative otologic disorders
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6069589/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30069423
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/biores.2018.0017
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