4.5 Review

Cell Transplantation to Restore Lost Auditory Nerve Function is a Realistic Clinical Opportunity

Journal

CELL TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 30, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/09636897211035076

Keywords

auditory nerve; cell transplantation; glial scar; nerve regeneration; scaffold

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (MEXT) [26931051, 24931046, 13557112, 1559150, 12470281, 09557113-3, 10877209, 08457356-3, 09557113, 08457356, 0745730, 06454407, 03454341, 58770916]
  2. Univers Foundation
  3. General Insurance Association of Japan
  4. Japan Health Foundation
  5. Osaka Gas Group Welfare Foundation
  6. Zenkyoren
  7. Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Welfare Foundation
  8. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [08457356, 12470281, 06454407, 24931046, 10877209, 09557113, 13557112, 58770916, 03454341, 26931051] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Hearing loss, especially in the elderly, can lead to social isolation, depression, and even dementia. While traditional treatments focus on hair cells, cell transplantation has emerged as a promising option for restoring auditory nerve function. Studies on animal models have shown potential for functional recovery through cell transplantation, offering a realistic possibility for clinical application in various types of hearing loss.
Hearing is one of our most important means of communication. Disabling hearing loss (DHL) is a long-standing, unmet problem in medicine, and in many elderly people, it leads to social isolation, depression, and even dementia. Traditionally, major efforts to cure DHL have focused on hair cells (HCs). However, the auditory nerve is also important because it transmits electrical signals generated by HCs to the brainstem. Its function is critical for the success of cochlear implants as well as for future therapies for HC regeneration. Over the past two decades, cell transplantation has emerged as a promising therapeutic option for restoring lost auditory nerve function, and two independent studies on animal models show that cell transplantation can lead to functional recovery. In this article, we consider the approaches most likely to achieve success in the clinic. We conclude that the structure and biochemical integrity of the auditory nerve is critical and that it is important to preserve the remaining neural scaffold, and in particular the glial scar, for the functional integration of donor cells. To exploit the natural, autologous cell scaffold and to minimize the deleterious effects of surgery, donor cells can be placed relatively easily on the surface of the nerve endoscopically. In this context, the selection of donor cells is a critical issue. Nevertheless, there is now a very realistic possibility for clinical application of cell transplantation for several different types of hearing loss.

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