Progress in treating hearing loss
Harvard Gazette - Health News Mar 21, 2017
Researchers develop drug cocktail that unlocks potential to regrow inner–ear Âhair cells.
Harvard Stem Cell Institute (HSCI) researchers at Brigham and WomenÂs Hospital (BWH) and Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary and colleagues from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have developed an approach to replace damaged sound–sensing hair cells, which eventually may lead to therapies for people who live with disabling hearing loss.
In a journal Cell Reports study, the researchers identified a small molecule cocktail that increased the population of cells responsible for generating hair cells in the inner ear. Unlike hair on the human head, the hair cells lining that bony structure, called the cochlea, do not regenerate.
HSCI principal faculty Jeff Karp, HSCI affiliate faculty Albert Edge, and MITÂs Robert Langer were co–corresponding authors of the study. Will McLean, a postdoctoral fellow in the Edge lab, and Xiaolei Yin, an instructor in medicine at BWH, were co–first authors.
In 2012, Edge and colleagues identified a population of stem cells, characterized by an Lgr5+ marker, which scientists could turn into hair cells in a dish. A year later, Edge had converted the resident population of these cells in mice into hair cells, though the ability to restore hearing using this approach has been limited.
ÂThe problem is the cochlea is so small and there are so few cells that it creates a bottleneck limiting the number and types of experiments researchers could perform, said Edge, director of the Tillotson Cell Biology Unit at Mass. Eye and Ear and a professor of otolaryngology at Harvard Medical School (HMS).
However, by exposing Lgr5+ cells isolated from the cochlea of mice to the small molecule cocktail, the researchers were able to create a 2,000–fold increase in the number of stem cells.
ÂThose molecules were a key to unlocking this regenerative capability, said Karp, who is also a bioengineer at BWH and an associate professor of medicine at HMS.
Inspired by creatures with significant regenerative potential, including lizards and sharks, KarpÂs lab initially turned to one of the bodyÂs most highly regenerative tissues, the gastrointestinal lining, which completely replaces itself every four to five days. Central to this process is the paneth cell, neighbor to the intestinal stem cells that are responsible for generating all mature cell types in the intestine. The paneth cells effectively tell the stem cells, also characterized by their Lgr5+ markers, when to turn on and off.
Karp and his colleagues at MIT looked at the basic biology of the ties between paneth cells and intestinal stem cells and identified small molecules that could communicate directly with and control the Lgr5+ stem cells.
ÂWhile we were developing the approach for the intestinal cells, we demonstrated it also worked in several other tissues with the Lgr5+ stem cells and progenitors, including the inner ear, Karp said.
When the researchers coupled the cocktail with established differentiation protocols, they were able to generate large quantities of functional hair cells in a petri dish. Using protocols from the Edge lab, the researchers then thoroughly characterized the differentiated cells to demonstrate they were functional hair cells. Researchers tested the cocktail on newborn mice, adult mice, non–human primates, and cells from a human cochlea.
ÂWe can now use these cells for drug screening as well as genetic analysis, Edge said. ÂOur lab is using the cells to better understand the pathways for expansion and differentiation of the cells.Â
Additionally, the small molecule cocktail may also be turned into a therapeutic treatment. Karp has co–founded Frequency Therapeutics, which plans to use insights from these studies to develop treatments for hearing loss.
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Harvard Stem Cell Institute (HSCI) researchers at Brigham and WomenÂs Hospital (BWH) and Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary and colleagues from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have developed an approach to replace damaged sound–sensing hair cells, which eventually may lead to therapies for people who live with disabling hearing loss.
In a journal Cell Reports study, the researchers identified a small molecule cocktail that increased the population of cells responsible for generating hair cells in the inner ear. Unlike hair on the human head, the hair cells lining that bony structure, called the cochlea, do not regenerate.
HSCI principal faculty Jeff Karp, HSCI affiliate faculty Albert Edge, and MITÂs Robert Langer were co–corresponding authors of the study. Will McLean, a postdoctoral fellow in the Edge lab, and Xiaolei Yin, an instructor in medicine at BWH, were co–first authors.
In 2012, Edge and colleagues identified a population of stem cells, characterized by an Lgr5+ marker, which scientists could turn into hair cells in a dish. A year later, Edge had converted the resident population of these cells in mice into hair cells, though the ability to restore hearing using this approach has been limited.
ÂThe problem is the cochlea is so small and there are so few cells that it creates a bottleneck limiting the number and types of experiments researchers could perform, said Edge, director of the Tillotson Cell Biology Unit at Mass. Eye and Ear and a professor of otolaryngology at Harvard Medical School (HMS).
However, by exposing Lgr5+ cells isolated from the cochlea of mice to the small molecule cocktail, the researchers were able to create a 2,000–fold increase in the number of stem cells.
ÂThose molecules were a key to unlocking this regenerative capability, said Karp, who is also a bioengineer at BWH and an associate professor of medicine at HMS.
Inspired by creatures with significant regenerative potential, including lizards and sharks, KarpÂs lab initially turned to one of the bodyÂs most highly regenerative tissues, the gastrointestinal lining, which completely replaces itself every four to five days. Central to this process is the paneth cell, neighbor to the intestinal stem cells that are responsible for generating all mature cell types in the intestine. The paneth cells effectively tell the stem cells, also characterized by their Lgr5+ markers, when to turn on and off.
Karp and his colleagues at MIT looked at the basic biology of the ties between paneth cells and intestinal stem cells and identified small molecules that could communicate directly with and control the Lgr5+ stem cells.
ÂWhile we were developing the approach for the intestinal cells, we demonstrated it also worked in several other tissues with the Lgr5+ stem cells and progenitors, including the inner ear, Karp said.
When the researchers coupled the cocktail with established differentiation protocols, they were able to generate large quantities of functional hair cells in a petri dish. Using protocols from the Edge lab, the researchers then thoroughly characterized the differentiated cells to demonstrate they were functional hair cells. Researchers tested the cocktail on newborn mice, adult mice, non–human primates, and cells from a human cochlea.
ÂWe can now use these cells for drug screening as well as genetic analysis, Edge said. ÂOur lab is using the cells to better understand the pathways for expansion and differentiation of the cells.Â
Additionally, the small molecule cocktail may also be turned into a therapeutic treatment. Karp has co–founded Frequency Therapeutics, which plans to use insights from these studies to develop treatments for hearing loss.
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