New York: Age-related hearing loss is associated with a decrease of cholesterol in the inner ear and a common supplement may help reduce the condition, according to a study in mice.
Experiments published in the open-access journal PLOS Biology show that phytosterol supplements were able to act in place of the lost cholesterol and prevent sensory dysfunction in mice. Sensory cells in the inner ear called outer hair cells (OHCs) amplify sounds by changing their length.
As people age, these cells lose their ability to stretch in response to sound, preventing sound amplification and leading to age-related hearing loss. Because cholesterol is a key player in the stretch response, and because brain cholesterol has recently been shown to decrease with age, researchers hypothesise that hearing loss might be related to loss of cholesterol in OHCs. The team from the University of Buenos Aires in Argentina tested this hypothesis in mice.
First, the researchers measured the amount of CYP46A1 in inner ear OHCs because this enzyme helps break down and recycle cholesterol. As expected, they found more CYP46A1 in the inner ears of older mice than in younger mice, and consequently less cholesterol. Next, they showed cause and effect by inducing hearing loss in young mice, as indicated by abnormal inner ear-cell output, by over-activating CYP46A1 with a drug.
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