Skip to main content
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2008 Jun 14;65(15):2407–2418. doi: 10.1007/s00018-008-8195-y

Prestin up-regulation in chronic salicylate (aspirin) administration: An implication of functional dependence of prestin expression

N Yu 1,2, M-L Zhu 1, B Johnson 1, Y-P Liu 1, R O Jones 1, H-B Zhao 1,
PMCID: PMC2548279  NIHMSID: NIHMS66976  PMID: 18560754

Abstract.

Salicylate (aspirin) can reversibly eliminate outer hair cell (OHC) electromotility to induce hearing loss. Prestin is the OHC electromotility motor protein. Here we report that, consistence with increase in distortion product otoacoustic emission, long-term administration of salicylate can increase prestin expression and OHC electromotility. The prestin expression at the mRNA and protein levels was increased by three- to four-fold. In contrast to the acute inhibition, the OHC electromotility associated charge density was also increased by 18%. This incremental increase was reversible. After cessation of salicylate administration, the prestin expression returned to normal. We also found that long-term administration of salicylate did not alter cyclooxygenase (Cox) II expression but down-regulated NF-κB and increased nuclear transcription factors c-fos and egr-1. The data suggest that prestin expression in vivo is dynamically up-regulated to increase OHC electromotility in long-term administration of salicylate via the Cox-II-independent pathways.

Keywords. Prestin, outer hair cell electromotility, salicylate, aspirin, functional dependence, hearing, tinnitus

Footnotes

Received 10 April 2008; received after revision 30 May 2008; accepted 3 June 2008


Articles from Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS are provided here courtesy of Springer

RESOURCES