A significant fraction of patients with Alzheimer's Disease (AD) also have acquired hearing loss. Why these two diseases of the aged are correlated is a matter of great debate. In some cases, both may arise from the same cause. In that case, acquired hearing loss might become a useful biomarker for early treatment of AD. Alternatively, untreated hearing loss might drive AD progression, either through increasing social isolation or by exacerbating working memory deficits during communication. In the latter case, treating hearing loss could delay the onset or progression of AD. Unfortunately, hearing aid use is not widespread among people with acquired hearing loss, prompting interest in biological cures. This parent R01 grant investigates ERBB2 signaling as a candidate for stimulating inner ear regeneration, using transgenic mouse models to over-express an constitutively active form of ERBB2 (CA- ERBB2) in supporting cells of the inner ear. We have recently published that activation of ERBB2 in the newborn mouse cochlear drives the production of ectopic hair cells. We also show preliminary data indicating that young adult mice with CA-ERBB2 significantly recover low-frequency hearing after traumatic noise exposure, compared to their control siblings. While still quite preliminary, this exciting result may also be useful in studies of the interaction of AD and acquired hearing loss. We seek supplemental funding to expand our ongoing experiments, so that we might address new basic questions about AD in the context of this new hearing restoration. We plan to employ mice harboring two transgenes, the K670N and M671L mutations in the amyloid precursor protein (APP), and the M146L mutation in presenilin 1 (PS1). We will cross such APP/PS1de9 mice into our current transgenic system, where we obtain mice that can express CA-ERBB2 under control of a Tet-ON promoter regulated by a supporting cell specific CRE recombinase, Fgfr3-iCRE and ROSA-rtTA. We will then investigate whether mice with both CA- ERBB2 and APP/PS1de9 exhibit similar recovery dynamics from damage as those with CA-ERBB2 alone. We have the advantage that we can design follow-up experiments regardless of the outcome. If AD-related transgenes prevent hearing loss recovery, then we will plan to investigate a causative role for these genes in hearing loss. If AD-related transgenes do not prevent hearing recovery, then we plan to investigate if this intervention can delay onset or progression of AD-like symptoms in mice. Thus, we predict that these experiments will further a greater understanding into this puzzling dynamic of hearing loss and AD progression.

Public Health Relevance

Alzheimer?s Disease and acquired hearing loss are significantly correlated, and it is unknown if either disease accelerates the other?s progression. My R01 application, ?Sufficiency of ErbB2 signaling in murine inner ear supporting cell proliferation,? examines the possibility that ErbB2 signaling can be used to drive inner ear regeneration after damage. This proposed supplement will test if ErbB2 signaling can drive hearing restoration in a transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer?s Disease, as a preliminary step in understanding this correlation.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
3R01DC014261-05S1
Application #
9886613
Study Section
Program Officer
Freeman, Nancy
Project Start
2019-03-06
Project End
2021-01-31
Budget Start
2019-03-06
Budget End
2021-01-31
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2019
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Rochester
Department
Neurosciences
Type
School of Medicine & Dentistry
DUNS #
041294109
City
Rochester
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
14627
Zhang, Jingyuan; Wang, Quan; Abdul-Aziz, Dunia et al. (2018) ERBB2 signaling drives supporting cell proliferation in vitro and apparent supernumerary hair cell formation in vivo in the neonatal mouse cochlea. Eur J Neurosci 48:3299-3316
Paquette, Stephen T; Dawes, Ryan P; Sundar, Isaac K et al. (2018) Chronic cigarette smoke exposure drives spiral ganglion neuron loss in mice. Sci Rep 8:5746
Gilels, Felicia; Paquette, Stephen T; Beaulac, Holly J et al. (2017) Severe hearing loss and outer hair cell death in homozygous Foxo3 knockout mice after moderate noise exposure. Sci Rep 7:1054
Paquette, Stephen T; Gilels, Felicia; White, Patricia M (2016) Noise exposure modulates cochlear inner hair cell ribbon volumes, correlating with changes in auditory measures in the FVB/nJ mouse. Sci Rep 6:25056
White, Patricia M (2016) The Role of the Transcription Factor Foxo3 in Hearing Maintenance: Informed Speculation on a New Player in the Cochlea. Biomed Res Int 2016:1870675
Gilels, Felicia; Paquette, Stephen T; Zhang, Jingyuan et al. (2013) Mutation of Foxo3 causes adult onset auditory neuropathy and alters cochlear synapse architecture in mice. J Neurosci 33:18409-24