4.8 Article

Noise Exposures Causing Hearing Loss Generate Proteotoxic Stress and Activate the Proteostasis Network

Journal

CELL REPORTS
Volume 33, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2020.108431

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Funding

  1. NU Knowles Hearing Center Pilot award [R00 DC-013805, W81XWH-19-1-0627]
  2. [BX001295]
  3. [T32 MH067564]

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Exposure to excessive sound causes noise-induced hearing loss through complex mechanisms and represents a common and unmet neurological condition. We investigate how noise insults affect the cochlea with proteomics and functional assays. Quantitative proteomics reveals that exposure to loud noise causes proteotoxicity. We identify and confirm hundreds of proteins that accumulate, including cytoskeletal proteins, and several nodes of the proteostasis network. Transcriptomic analysis reveals that a subset of the genes encoding these proteins also increases acutely after noise exposure, including numerous proteasome subunits. Global cochlear protein ubiquitylation levels build up after exposure to excess noise, and we map numerous posttranslationally modified lysines residues. Several collagen proteins decrease in abundance, and Col9a1 specifically localizes to pillar cell heads. After two weeks of recovery, the cochlea selectively elevates the abundance of the protein synthesis machinery. We report that overstimulation of the auditory system drives a robust cochlear proteotoxic stress response.

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