New Technique May be Boon for Hair Cell Studies
Editor: Hair cell regeneration is the "holy grail" for some folks in
the hearing loss community, because it might restore natural hearing for
those with sensorineural hearing loss. It's a long ways from prime time
yet, but this new technique for culturing cells may speed the discovery
process.
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In a breakthrough that will likely accelerate research aimed at cures
for hearing loss, tinnitus, and balance problems, scientists have
perfected a laboratory culturing technique that provides a reliable new
source of cells critical to understanding certain inner-ear disorders.
The cells, known as hair cells, are the essential sound and balance
detectors in the inner ear. Damage to these cells is a key factor in
hearing and balance loss, and while birds, fishes, and amphibians can
quickly regrow damaged hair cells, humans cannot. Until now, scientists
seeking clues to this problem have been hampered by difficult procedures
required to gather these cells for their research.
In the September 24-28 early edition of the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences (PNAS), MBL Whitman Investigators Zhengqing Hu and
Jeffrey Corwin, both of the University of Virginia School of Medicine,
describe a new technique for isolating cells from the inner ears of
chicken embryos and growing them in their laboratory. The scientists
achieved these results by inducing avian cells to differentiate into hair
cells via a process known as mesenchymal-to-epithelial transition.
Hu and Corwin were able to freeze and thaw the cultured cells, then
grow new cells from the thawed cultures - a discovery that will make hair
cells accessible to more researchers.
The study of hair cells is crucial to understanding hearing loss
because hair cells are a precious commodity in humans. We are born with a
limited number of these sound detectors in each ear, which can be easily
damaged by age, certain illnesses, loud noises, and adverse reactions to
medications. Once damaged, the cells do not grow back, causing hearing and
balance problems.
"Until now, scientists working to understand many inner ear disorders
had to resort to difficult microdissections to gather even small numbers
of these cells, which limited the types of research that could be pursued
and slowed the pace of discoveries," says Corwin.
The availability of vials of frozen cells that can be induced to form
hair cells should remove a significant barrier to progress toward the
development of treatments for the more than 20 million Americans who
suffer from hearing loss and balance problems.