Polyphenols in Inner Ear Neurobiology, Health and Disease: From Bench to Clinics.
Naomi OsakabeSergio ModafferiMaria Laura OntarioFrancesco RampullaVincenzo ZimboneMaria Rita MiglioreTilman FritschAli Saber AbdelhameedLuigi MaiolinoGabriella LupoCarmelina Daniela AnfusoElisabetta GenoveseDaniele MonzaniUwe WenzelEdward J CalabreseR Martin VabulasVittorio CalabresePublished in: Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania) (2023)
There is substantial experimental and clinical interest in providing effective ways to both prevent and slow the onset of hearing loss. Auditory hair cells, which occur along the basilar membrane of the cochlea, often lose functionality due to age-related biological alterations, as well as from exposure to high decibel sounds affecting a diminished/damaged auditory sensitivity. Hearing loss is also seen to take place due to neuronal degeneration before or following hair cell destruction/loss. A strategy is necessary to protect hair cells and XIII cranial/auditory nerve cells prior to injury and throughout aging. Within this context, it was proposed that cochlea neural stem cells may be protected from such aging and environmental/noise insults via the ingestion of protective dietary supplements. Of particular importance is that these studies typically display a hormetic-like biphasic dose-response pattern that prevents the occurrence of auditory cell damage induced by various model chemical toxins, such as cisplatin. Likewise, the hormetic dose-response also enhances the occurrence of cochlear neural cell viability, proliferation, and differentiation. These findings are particularly important since they confirmed a strong dose dependency of the significant beneficial effects (which is biphasic), whilst having a low-dose beneficial response, whereas extensive exposures may become ineffective and/or potentially harmful. According to hormesis, phytochemicals including polyphenols exhibit biphasic dose-response effects activating low-dose antioxidant signaling pathways, resulting in the upregulation of vitagenes, a group of genes involved in preserving cellular homeostasis during stressful conditions. Modulation of the vitagene network through polyphenols increases cellular resilience mechanisms, thus impacting neurological disorder pathophysiology. Here, we aimed to explore polyphenols targeting the NF-E2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) pathway to neuroprotective and therapeutic strategies that can potentially reduce oxidative stress and inflammation, thus preventing auditory hair cell and XIII cranial/auditory nerve cell degeneration. Furthermore, we explored techniques to enhance their bioavailability and efficacy.
Keyphrases
- hearing loss
- oxidative stress
- induced apoptosis
- signaling pathway
- low dose
- single cell
- working memory
- cell cycle arrest
- cell therapy
- risk assessment
- healthcare
- primary care
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- public health
- air pollution
- pi k akt
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- cerebral ischemia
- mental health
- immune response
- cell death
- cell proliferation
- climate change
- diabetic rats
- cancer therapy
- drug delivery
- health information
- long non coding rna
- brain injury