Piplartine attenuates aminoglycoside-induced TRPV1 activity and protects from hearing loss in mice.
Marisa ZallocchiSarath VijayakumarJonathan FleegelLyudmila BatalkinaKatyarina E BrunetteDhaval ShukalZhiyong ChenOlivier DevuystHuizhan LiuDavid Z Z HeAli Sajid ImamiAbdul-Rizaq Ali HamoudRobert McCullumsmithMartin Conda-SheridanLuana Janaína De CamposJian ZuoPublished in: Science translational medicine (2024)
Hearing loss is a major health concern in our society, affecting more than 400 million people worldwide. Among the causes, aminoglycoside therapy can result in permanent hearing loss in 40% to 60% of patients receiving treatment, and despite these high numbers, no drug for preventing or treating this type of hearing loss has yet been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration. We have previously conducted high-throughput screenings of bioactive compounds, using zebrafish as our discovery platform, and identified piplartine as a potential therapeutic molecule. In the present study, we expanded this work and characterized piplartine's physicochemical and therapeutic properties. We showed that piplartine had a wide therapeutic window and neither induced nephrotoxicity in vivo in zebrafish nor interfered with aminoglycoside antibacterial activity. In addition, a fluorescence-based assay demonstrated that piplartine did not inhibit cytochrome C activity in microsomes. Coadministration of piplartine protected from kanamycin-induced hair cell loss in zebrafish and protected hearing function, outer hair cells, and presynaptic ribbons in a mouse model of kanamycin ototoxicity. Last, we investigated piplartine's mechanism of action by phospho-omics, immunoblotting, immunohistochemistry, and molecular dynamics experiments. We found an up-regulation of AKT1 signaling in the cochleas of mice cotreated with piplartine. Piplartine treatment normalized kanamycin-induced up-regulation of TRPV1 expression and modulated the gating properties of this receptor. Because aminoglycoside entrance to the inner ear is, in part, mediated by TRPV1, these results suggested that by regulating TRPV1 expression, piplartine blocked aminoglycoside's entrance, thereby preventing the long-term deleterious effects of aminoglycoside accumulation in the inner ear compartment.
Keyphrases
- hearing loss
- high throughput
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- molecular dynamics
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- drug induced
- acinetobacter baumannii
- mouse model
- poor prognosis
- drug administration
- healthcare
- neuropathic pain
- mental health
- mass spectrometry
- small molecule
- public health
- adipose tissue
- drug resistant
- insulin resistance
- cell therapy
- high fat diet induced
- single molecule
- cell proliferation
- high resolution
- combination therapy
- spinal cord injury
- quantum dots
- density functional theory
- climate change
- wild type
- cell cycle arrest