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A new active peptide from Neptunea arthritica cumingii exerts protective effects against gentamicin-induced sensory-hair cell injury in zebrafish

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posted on 2019-09-19, 07:35 authored by Shanshan Zhang, Yan Gao, Qiuxia He, Yun Zhang, Liwen Han, Meng Jin, Tong Liu, Kechun Liu, Chen Sun

Gentamicin is commonly used for effective treatment of severe Gram-negative bacterial infections. However, its use is being increasingly restricted owing to the ototoxic effects attributed to it. Gentamicin-induced ototoxicity is thought to be related with apoptosis induced by reactive oxygen species (ROS). In this study, we found a novel active peptide from Neptunea arthritica cumingii with otoprotective effects and no significant embryotoxic effects. The combined application of gentamicin and this novel active peptide helped sensory-hair cells to protect themselves from lethal ROS accumulation. This, in turn, reduced the expression of three genes (caspase-3, caspase-9, Bax), and thereby, the sensory-hair cell apoptosis promoted by ROS accumulation upon gentamicin administration. Our findings provided new insights into the prevention of gentamicin-induced hearing loss.

Funding

This work was supported by the Public Science and Technology Research Funds Projects of Ocean under Grant [number 201505030–2]; the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant [number 81703624]; the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant [number 81602982]; the Youth fund of Shandong Academy of Sciences under Grant [number 2018QN0027], the Natural Science Funds of Shandong Province under Grant [number ZR2016YL009], and the Mount Taishan Scholar Program under Grant [number tspd20181211].

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    Drug & Chemical Toxicology

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