4.7 Article

Regulator of G Protein Signalling 4 (RGS4) as a Novel Target for the Treatment of Sensorineural Hearing Loss

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22010003

Keywords

sensorineural hearing loss; noise-induced cochlear injury; cochlear rescue; otoprotection; adenosine A(1) receptor; regulator of G protein signalling 4; CCG-4986; intratympanic drug delivery

Funding

  1. Auckland Medical Research Foundation (New Zealand)

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This study aimed to investigate the otoprotective effect of increasing A(1)R responsiveness to endogenous adenosine by targeting RGS4, which was achieved through pharmacological intervention. The results showed that intratympanic administration of a RGS4 inhibitor could attenuate noise-induced auditory threshold shifts and improve survival of sensorineural tissues in the cochlea, suggesting a novel approach for the treatment of SNHL.
We and others have previously identified signalling pathways associated with the adenosine A(1) receptor (A(1)R) as important regulators of cellular responses to injury in the cochlea. We have shown that the post-exposure treatment with adenosine A(1)R agonists confers partial protection against acoustic trauma and other forms of sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL). The aim of this study was to determine if increasing A(1)R responsiveness to endogenous adenosine would have the same otoprotective effect. This was achieved by pharmacological targeting of the Regulator of G protein Signalling 4 (RGS4). RGS proteins inhibit signal transduction pathways initiated by G protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) by enhancing GPCR deactivation and receptor desensitisation. A molecular complex between RGS4 and neurabin, an intracellular scaffolding protein expressed in neural and cochlear tissues, is the key negative regulator of A(1)R activity in the brain. In this study, Wistar rats (6-8 weeks) were exposed to traumatic noise (110 dBSPL, 8-16 kHz) for 2 h and a small molecule RGS4 inhibitor CCG-4986 was delivered intratympanically in a Poloxamer-407 gel formulation for sustained drug release 24 or 48 h after noise exposure. Intratympanic administration of CCG-4986 48 h after noise exposure attenuated noise-induced permanent auditory threshold shifts by up to 19 dB, whilst the earlier drug administration (24 h) led to even better preservation of auditory thresholds (up to 32 dB). Significant improvement of auditory thresholds and suprathreshold responses was linked to improved survival of sensorineural tissues and afferent synapses in the cochlea. Our studies thus demonstrate that intratympanic administration of CCG-4986 can rescue cochlear injury and hearing loss induced by acoustic overexposure. This research represents a novel paradigm for the treatment of various forms of SNHL based on regulation of GPCR.

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