Cells in Developing Ear May Explain Tinnitus
Editor: You may not really care what causes tinnitus nearly as much as
you care that someone finds a way to stop it. The two are, of course,
related; one of the keys to curing something is understanding what is
causing it. Scientists at Johns Hopkins University are making progress
towards that end!
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Brain scientists at Johns Hopkins have discovered how cells in the
developing ear make their own noise, long before the ear is able to detect
sound around them. The finding, reported in this week's Nature, helps to
explain how the developing auditory system generates brain activity in the
absence of sound. It also may explain why people sometimes experience
tinnitus and hear sounds that seem to come from nowhere.
The research team made their discovery while studying the properties of
non-nerve cells in the ears of young rats. These so-called support cells
were thought to be silent bystanders not directly involved in nerve
communication. However, to the researchers' surprise, these cells showed
robust electrical activity, similar to nerve cells. Further, this activity
occurred spontaneously, without sound or any external stimulus.
"It's long been thought that nerve cells that connect auditory organs
to the brain need to experience sound or other nerve activity to find
their way to the part of the brain responsible for processing sound," says
the study's lead author, Dwight Bergles, Ph.D., an associate professor of
neuroscience at Hopkins. "So when we saw that these supporting cells could
generate their own electrical activity, we suspected they might somehow be
involved in triggering the activity required for proper nerve wiring."
To figure out how these cells were generating electrical pulses,
Bergles' team suspected that a chemical might be involved; so they applied
a number of different candidate drugs and chemicals to the developing
cochlea ? the small, hollow and liquid-filled chamber in the inner ear
that converts sound waves to electrical signals ? hoping to block the
mystery trigger. The few drugs that altered the electrical output all
disabled ATP (adenosine triphosphate), a chemical most often used as a
cell's energy currency but also, as in this case, as a signal to
communicate with other cells.
According to Bergles, a breakthrough came when it was discovered that
ATP also caused the supporting cells to change their shape. By simply
videotaping the developing cochlea, the team was able to monitor where and
when ATP was released. After studying these movies, they found that ATP
was being released near hair cells, the cells that are responsible for
transferring sound information to auditory nerves. It was known that hair
cells have receptors for ATP, so they might also be affected by the ATP
released from the supporting cells. Indeed, the team found that hair cells
also showed spontaneous electrical activity, which occurred at the same
time as the responses in neighboring support cells and was blocked by
drugs that block ATP receptors.
In a domino-like effect, ATP then signals the hair cells to release
another chemical, glutamate, which then activates the nerve cells that
project into the brain. "It is as if ATP substitutes for sound when the
ear is still immature and physically incapable of detecting sound," says
Bergles, adding that "the cells we have been studying seem to be warming
up the machinery that will later be used to transmit sound signals to the
brain."
"We think that only a few cells release ATP at one time," says Bergles.
"And that small amount of free-floating ATP then activates only a few
nearby hair cells." This may help associated nerve cells, far away in the
depths of the brain, figure out who and where their neighbors are.
Bergles acknowledges that his experiments beg the question of why a
human or any animal would need to "hear" before birth. He speculates that
the ability to hear subtle differences, like the inflection in one's
voice, "requires a lot of fine-tuning based on where in the brain the
nerves connect. It could be that brief bursts of electrical activity in
just a few nerve cells at a time help do that fine-tuning so the system
works well."
While this activity likely is essential for the auditory system's
proper development, it could be bad in the adult, mature nervous system as
it would trigger electrical signals in the absence of sound. However, as
the ear matures during the first two weeks of a rat's life, most of the
cells that release ATP disappear so that by the time the rat can hear
sound, all the spontaneous electrical activity in its ears has stopped.
Although there is no ATP floating around at that point, the hair cells
continue to be able to respond to it, and exposure to loud sounds can
trigger ATP release in the ear. Bergles suspects that "if ATP were
released by the remaining support cells, it may cause the sensation of
sound when there is none," a condition known as tinnitus or ringing in the
ears. Alternatively, he notes that bursts of activity might trigger
changes in the connectivity of neurons in the brain, just like it does
during development, eventually leading to abnormal activity that is
perceived as sound.
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health.
Authors on the paper are Nicolas Tritsch, Eunyoung Yi, Elisabeth
Glowatzki and Bergles, all of Hopkins, and Jonathan Gale of the University
College London.