Scientific Reports (Feb 2021)

An antibody to RGMa promotes regeneration of cochlear synapses after noise exposure

  • Jerome Nevoux,
  • Mihaela Alexandru,
  • Thomas Bellocq,
  • Lei Tanaka,
  • Yushi Hayashi,
  • Takahisa Watabe,
  • Hanae Lahlou,
  • Kohsuke Tani,
  • Albert S. B. Edge

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-81294-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Auditory neuropathy is caused by the loss of afferent input to the brainstem via the components of the neural pathway comprising inner hair cells and the first order neurons of the spiral ganglion. Recent work has identified the synapse between cochlear primary afferent neurons and sensory hair cells as a particularly vulnerable component of this pathway. Loss of these synapses due to noise exposure or aging results in the pathology identified as hidden hearing loss, an initial stage of cochlear dysfunction that goes undetected in standard hearing tests. We show here that repulsive axonal guidance molecule a (RGMa) acts to prevent regrowth and synaptogenesis of peripheral auditory nerve fibers with inner hair cells. Treatment of noise-exposed animals with an anti-RGMa blocking antibody regenerated inner hair cell synapses and resulted in recovery of wave-I amplitude of the auditory brainstem response, indicating effective reversal of synaptopathy.