Growth Hormone Helps Repair The Zebrafish Ear
September 2011
Loud noise, especially repeated loud noise, is known to cause
irreversible damage to the hair cells inside the cochlea and eventually lead
to deafness. In mammals this is irreversible, however both birds and fish
are able to re-grow the damaged hair cells and restore hearing. New research
published in BioMed Central's open access journal BMC Neuroscience shows
that growth hormone is involved in this regeneration in zebrafish.
Researchers from Western Kentucky University and the University of
Louisville worked together to see which genes were switched on or off after
acoustic trauma and found distinct patterns of gene expression. Two days
after noise injury, inner ear cells were busy dividing to repair and replace
the damaged hair cells. This repair was associated with an alteration in the
regulation of 839 genes and many of the cellular pathways involved were the
same as those involved in cancer. This included a massive 64 fold increase
in the transcription of growth hormone.
MHC I ZE (a gene involved in regulating immune responses) is
down-regulated. But, since a strong inflammatory response to tissue damage
can interfere with wound healing, it is probably a good idea to locally
inhibit the immune response while repairing injury. Four days after trauma,
these levels had begun to return to normal.
Dr. Michael Smith commented, "Injecting growth hormone into zebrafish
stimulated cell proliferation in their inner ears, especially cells of the
utricle, a vestibular organ involved in balance. There are many homologs
between zebrafish and human genes and we are beginning to work on the
function of these genes within the ear. Understanding how fish are able to
repair their hair cells may eventually help us to understand ear injury in
people and provide treatments for hair cell loss."
Source: Western Kentucky University