Cells (Feb 2022)

L-Thyroxine Improves Vestibular Compensation in a Rat Model of Acute Peripheral Vestibulopathy: Cellular and Behavioral Aspects

  • Guillaume Rastoldo,
  • Emna Marouane,
  • Nada El-Mahmoudi,
  • David Péricat,
  • Isabelle Watabe,
  • Agnes Lapotre,
  • Alain Tonetto,
  • Alejandra López-Juárez,
  • Abdessadek El-Ahmadi,
  • Philippe Caron,
  • Marie-José Esteve Fraysse,
  • Christian Chabbert,
  • Andreas Zwergal,
  • Brahim Tighilet

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11040684
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. 684

Abstract

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Unilateral vestibular lesions induce a vestibular syndrome, which recovers over time due to vestibular compensation. The therapeutic effect of L-Thyroxine (L-T4) on vestibular compensation was investigated by behavioral testing and immunohistochemical analysis in a rat model of unilateral vestibular neurectomy (UVN). We demonstrated that a short-term L-T4 treatment reduced the vestibular syndrome and significantly promoted vestibular compensation. Thyroid hormone receptors (TRα and TRβ) and type II iodothyronine deiodinase (DIO2) were present in the vestibular nuclei (VN), supporting a local action of L-T4. We confirmed the T4-induced metabolic effects by demonstrating an increase in the number of cytochrome oxidase-labeled neurons in the VN three days after the lesion. L-T4 treatment modulated glial reaction by decreasing both microglia and oligodendrocytes in the deafferented VN three days after UVN and increased cell proliferation. Survival of newly generated cells in the deafferented vestibular nuclei was not affected, but microglial rather than neuronal differentiation was favored by L-T4 treatment.

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