
Newly formed cochlear hair cells contain intricate hair bundles with many stereocilia (critical for sensing sound) and other components that are critical for proper function and neural transmission. Credit: Will McLean
An approach to regenerate inner ear sensory hair cells reportedly lays the groundwork for treating chronic noise-induced hearing loss by the company, Frequency Therapeutics, Woburn, Mass, and its co-founders who are drawing on research from Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH), Harvard Medical School, Mass Eye and Ear Infirmary, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). In the February 21, 2017 edition of Cell Reports, the scientists describe a technique to grow large quantities of inner ear progenitor cells that convert into hair cells. The same techniques are said to show the ability to regenerate hair cells in the cochlea.
Hearing loss affects 360 million people worldwide according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Inner ear hair cells are responsible for detecting sound and helping to signal it to the brain. Loud sounds and toxic drugs can lead to death of the hair cells, which do not regenerate. Humans are born with only 15,000 sensory hair cells in each cochlea, which are susceptible to damage from exposure to loud noises and medications—leading to cell death and hearing loss over time.
According to a press release from Frequency Therapeutics, sufficient numbers of mammalian cochlear hair cells have not been able to be obtained to facilitate the development of therapeutic approaches for hearing loss. The new research built on previous work to control the growth of intestinal stem cells expressing the protein Lgr5 and targeted a different population of Lgr5 cells that were discovered to be the source of sensory hair cells in the cochlea during development (a subset of supporting cells or progenitors). The team successfully identified a protocol of small molecules to efficiently grow the cochlear progenitor cells into large colonies with a high capacity for differentiation into bona fide hair cells.
“The ability to regenerate hair cells within the inner ear already exists in nature,” said Jeff Karp, PhD, of BWH and Harvard Medical School in the press release. “Birds and amphibians are able to regenerate these cells throughout their lives, which provided the base for our inspiration to find similar pathways in mammals. With our collaborators at Mass Eye and Ear Infirmary, we were able to study a small molecule approach, that we developed at MIT and BWH, to expand progenitor cells from the mouse cochlea. We believe this technique represents a major advance for hearing loss research and will enable new physiological studies as well as genetic screens using drugs, siRNA, or gene overexpression.”
The research team first focused on optimizing the expansion of Lgr5 expressing cochlear progenitor cells. With the combination of a GSK3 inhibitor to activate the Wnt signaling pathway and a histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor to activate gene transcription, the research team achieved a greater than 2000-fold expansion of cochlear supporting cells compared to previous approaches. This protocol was used successfully and with consistency to generate colonies of neonatal and adult murine cells, as well as primate and human progenitor cells. Furthermore, according to the researchers, the team achieved 60-fold enhancement of hair cell production from the progenitor cells compared to current methods.
The generation of new hair cells was achieved even in cochlear tissue that had been depleted of hair cells by exposure to an ototoxic antibiotic. Importantly, hair cells produced from the protocols exhibited the same physical features, gene expression, and functionality as typical cochlear hair cells, says Frequency Therapeutics.
“This work has opened an entire field of what we call Progenitor Cell Activation (PCA), which we believe has many regenerative applications beyond hearing loss, ranging from skin-related diseases and ocular ailments to gastrointestinal diseases and diabetes,” said Will McLean, PhD, co-founder and VP, Biology and Regenerative Medicine, at Frequency Therapeutics, and the lead author of the paper. “Furthermore, the approach creates a platform with potential to explore large populations of previously difficult-to-access progenitor cell types. Drug discovery for the inner ear was limited by the inability acquire enough primary cells to explore drug targets. This approach unlocks that ability for hearing research and a variety of other fields.”
“By using Progenitor Cell Activation to restore healthy tissue within the inner ear, we’re harnessing the body’s innate ability to heal itself,” said David Lucchino, co-founder, president and CEO of Frequency Therapeutics. “Frequency’s development of a disease modifying therapeutic that can be administered with a simple injection could have a profound effect on chronic noise-induced hearing loss, our lead indication, and we are rapidly advancing this program into human clinical trials within the next 18 months,” added Chris Loose, PhD, co-founder and CSO of the company.
Frequency Therapeutics was founded to translate what the company describes as breakthrough work in Progenitor Cell Activation (PCA) by its scientific founders, Robert Langer, ScD, and Jeff Karp, PhD, into new treatments where controlled tissue regeneration with locally delivered drugs could have profound therapeutic potential. The company has licensed foundational patents from the MIT and Partners Healthcare.
Hearing Review has published several articles on work involving Lrg5, including work involving a co-author of this study, Albert Edge, PhD, and related work on blocking the notch pathway.
Original paper: McLean WJ, Yin X, Lu X, Lenz DR, McLean D, Langer R, Karp JM, Edge ASB. Clonal expansion of Lgr5-positive cells from mammalian cochlea and high-purity generation of sensory hair cells. Cell Reports. 2017;18(8):1917–1929.
Sources: Frequency Therapeutics; Brigham and Women’s Hospital; Cell Reports
That is great news !
I am 48 years and suffer for Tinnitus and hearing loss since i was 25 years old. I would very much participate in this program with human trials…please let me know.
Thanks
This is Verc good news – i am 48 years and suffer of Tinnitus and moderate gearing loss since. age 25.
I will very much participate in your projekt!
Very good news – let me know soon if its possible
Thanks
I need help and would love to be a part of this. I am 61 and have been suffering from tinnitus/hyperacusis for almost 20 years, and it is changing my life – am not the person I once was but am living with it as best I can. Tried medication – to no avail. Yes, I need help, please and thank you – this is wonderful news!
I would love to be a part of this. Suffering for about 15 years now – very sensitive to sounds around me, also, and becoming extremely agitated, and that is (was) with Zoloft – it did not help. I need help, please and thank you.
Wonderful. This is great news. Please keep me posted on the future developments.
I am amazed by this study, wish my mother that is turning 73 this year, could benefit from it. Please let me know when you are planning to have this treatment available. And if she could participate in the clinical trial. God bless you and guide you in this process! Gabriela
I am 66 and have hearing loss and tinnitus 24/7. Worked in manufacturing for 35 years but wore earring protection religiously. Would be very interested in participating. Thank you for all your hard work!
Hi, I too would be very keen to participate in clinical trials. I am a 37 year old musician and have noise-induced hearing loss (cochlea hair cell damage) from an explosion 11 years ago and all sorts of noises and distortion in one ear as well as hearing loss which I am desperate to try and cure if possible. Thanks
As many other that’s have be writting I’m a sufferer of tinnitus since last 12 years. I am seen your research as a hope to have a silence in my head. My tinnitus is 27/7 and more disturbing in my left head side. If you do have time to answer so many messages I would like to know when clinical trial will start and how long will take to have treatment available to all of us.
God bless your talent and predisposition to help other people’s.
Regards Ruben Lineiro (64)
I would love to participate too. I have severe ringing in one ear and moderate ringing in the other.
Marty
I have a hearing loss in the right ear as well as balance problem.I am 78 years old.. Can you help me.
how do I get on any waiting list to treat moderate sensitoury hearing loss. Please let me know where to apply.
Please let me know whether I can participate in your study. I am 69 years of age and wear hearing aids. Thank you.
I have suffered for many years with loss of hearing also have tinnitus I am 78 years old.
I am interested in your new research of the regrow of the hairs, if the research is successful it would be a miracle that millions of people would benefit.
I would be very grateful if I can participate in your research.
regard charlie
Hello sir, i am 27 years old and i m suffering from tinnitus in my left ear from last 2 years and the noise is continous. Please help me if there is any hope in new research. I am tired and worried now. Please help.
I am almost 66, and have noticed changes in my hearing.
Would love to be in a trial, please add me to the list. Thanks.
I am a musician, journalist and teacher whose life has been profoundly affected by bilateral noise-induced hearing loss. I would be extremely interested in participating in trials involving efforts to regrow cochlear hair cells as described. Please add me to any list of candidates you may be developing. This is very exciting research!
I have moderately severe (58%) and am very excited to read of the advances being made in restorative hearing. I am 75 years old and would be happy to participate in a clinical study.
I have worn hearing aids for about nine years with moderate success. I would like to be a part of the study and if that’s not possible please just keep me informed of your progress
I’d love to participate in this experiment as well, but as a IRB reviewer or even by finding my “clinical” hat or playing statistician and working on the study design. I’ve had tinnitus all of my life, still have hearing that is within normal limits through 8 kHz. and don’t think that hair cell loss or a need for regernation is in order for me. But boy, would I like to see that we can’t finally put away that old saw that sensorineural loss of hearing is irreversible.
Please inform us of any trials upcoming as my husband would very much like to participate. He has a severe hearing loss in both ears.
I have had single-sided hearing loss, which occurred in less than one hour, for approximately 4-5 years. I have tried several hearing devices, none of which were really successful. I would be exceedingly grateful to be a part of a trial study to see if it could help me. Please keep me informed of the possibility of my being accepted for this study. Thank you.
Hi
Desperate and suicidal at times.
Being suffering from Tinnitus for 16 years.
Hair cells destroyed as result of Garamycin administered incorrectly.
Also insuiin dependant for same period and suffering now from degenerated neck disc disease from ‘whiplash’ as a result of a bad accident 30 years ago.
It is ‘castotrophic’ as it has been exasibated by the added ptoblems and age. It is constant in both my ears and head now and has a snowball effect as it brings on tension in the neck as well, making things worse.
Please help!
The Tinn
I had tinnitus for many years and finally decided to go to an ear, nose and throat doctor.
After having a 5centemeter tumor removed from my thyroid my tinnitus vanished.
The doctor’s name is Dr. Maria Byrne . Derby, Ct.
I thank God for this.
please keep me updated on this research as my wife is very high hearing loss due to working in noisey places
I think this is great research and so promising in so many ways. However, I’d be curious to know that even if hair cells are able to be regrown whether the brain’s nerve pathways for hearing will be able to kick back in due to the lack of prolonged stimulation.
I would LOVE to be a part of this study. I am a 59 year old women who has had hearing loss for 30 years in both ears. I have tinnitis (spelling?) as well in both ears. Please keep me posted as to results. Hope you can move ahead of the hearing aid companies, as I fear they would hold you back.
After experiencing severe congestion in my ears this spring, I was given 4 rounds of antibiotic, prednisone, ear drops, nose sprays, deccongestants and an ear tube. Ears still feel stopped up but have now developed sudden onset tinnitus which is driving me crazy! Please keep me posted on your progress. Thank you.
I’m a long time retired audiologist with a trail of audiologic testing. Onset of H.L. was a gradual reduction in typical A.U. pattern that accelerated during last 20 yrs. A.D. Severe.; A.S. moderate.I currently wear a CROS with modest success. Obviously, an opportunity to serve in relevant studies would be satisfying. I’m active socially.
Please keep me in touch of further development
i would LOVE to be a part of this study. I am a capable, confident, mature, accountable and reliable person with severe hearing loss. I wear ear technology in both ears and rely heavily on lip-reading. This would be a wonderful opportunity.
I am 61 years old and have bilateral hearing loss. I’ve also been suffering from ever increasing tinnitus for at least 30 years combined with associated hyperacusis. Please send me information about this study and how to participate.
I Read this report and it has given me hope where there was none ! Started losing my hearing at 30 now 57 and profoundly deaf in right ear and only 40% in the left ear I pray this new stem cell treatment will be available to us all who are suffering in this lonely isolating world before I am plunged into silence and more depression it would be amazing to hear things that are now a sad memory. Please keep up this ground breaking work and help the millions of us who struggle with deafness
I heard there is a clinic in panama that is already doing the stem cell therapy even mel gibson and his dad have had therapy and it helped them.
I have low volume hearing loss in my left ear. Onset 2012. I would love to be a trial candidate for this stem cell study. I am 64 and have been diagnosed with Meniere’s, however I hardly have any severe symptoms,only mild spinning sensation that doesn’t last for more than 20 sec. when laying down.
I am hard of hearing and have been wearing hearing aids for many years. I have tryed all different brands and had trouble hearing with all of them.I read about the wonderful work DR.Jeff Karp and DR. Robert Langer are doing to grow hair in the cochlear of the ear. It is about time someone is doing something about us. People who cant hear. I would like to be in your study.Please keep me informed. I will be forever grateful to you.
Hello Lina, I would so appreciate if you would pass any info my way as well. I had my hearing until a year ago when a quack pa couldn’t cure a simple ear infection for 4 months and giving me wrong antibiotic the whole time, then……proceeded to stick a “POWER WASHER” in my ear and literally blew a hole in my eardrum! I had the patch surgery which did not help much. I’m needing as much info on the hair replacement procedures as I can get. Thank you and good luck to you as well.
Please inform me of any future trial studies. I have severe to profound hearing loss in both ears due to the MMR vaccination in early childhood. I am presently 35 & wear bilateral hearing aids. In spite of my hearing loss I do not sign. I communicate by using my residual hearing & reading lips. I received my undergraduate degree at the University of Colorado in Boulder & my Masters in Business at the University of Colorado in Denver. I consider myself to be a good communicator & would make an excellent candidate for a trial study for the regeneration of hair cells.
Is there anyway I can be used in this research,I literally cried while reading this write up,I was so excited.I am 48 yrs old and wear 2 aids,I would gladly be a part of this research.
I have found your research data results to be most interesting. I am 74 years of age and have had a severe hearing difficulty for over 20 years. I would be very interested in participating in your study if possible. Looking forward to hearing additional information on this study.
How does one going about applying to become a member of the study?
Julie, If you find out any info about joining the study please let me know. Thank You
My Wife had hearing loss to the left ear since she got mumps recently in march. No progress till now and she suspect it because hair cells are dead. Please advise of any developments and when treatment could be available. It is really painful to lose an ear suddennly.
I am a 70-year-old woman and have been assessed for the Baha and cochlear implant. I do not have enough bone conductive hearing in my left ear to get any benefit from the Baha. I am not eligible for the cochlear because my word recognition in my right ear is still above 50%. I find the advances in this technology to regrow the hair cells to be very interesting and hopefully helpful in my lifetime.
My hearing status:
Asymmetrical Hearing Loss – worse in one ear than the other. Single sided deafness.
Right Ear:
Sensorineural with moderate hearing loss
Left Ear:
Sensorineural And Conductive. Mixed with profound hearing loss in air conducted and moderately severe in the bone conducted. My conductive loss is due to ear infections and a cholesteatoma surgery.
I’m wondering if my right ear with only Sensorineural loss would improve with hair regrowth?
Judy Shugarts
I’m a professional musician and I developed tinnitus just 2 months ago…it has turned my world upside down. Everything in my life suddenly seems uncertain. I would love to be involved in the study…Thank you so much for your work!!! This is a horrible condition and many millions of people are suffering.
Barry
For my Single Sided Deafness and tinnitus I’m looking into getting a Cochlear Implant as others have been successful treating it with that. However this article promises a major breakthrough which, like CI, will change the lives of millions.
I’ve asked my Audiologist several times about stem cells and inner ear cells. I’ve suffered from tinnitus and depression for over 20 years. I ‘m desperate for help. Please get me into a study. I can’t live like this anymore.
i have had Tininittus since 1989 and gradually some if my hearing in my left ear and still suffering from tinnitus this would be a Blessing from God please keep me updated. Thanks will be praying for all those who are invoved
Please advise of any developements and when treatment could be available.
Hearing loss in both ears with tinnitus. Please put me on your mailing list for updates. Your work is most interesting. I need help.
I am quite interested in your research and wish to follow it. I have now approximately 40% hearing loss and hope that your research will progress fast enough to be able to benefit from it. Full steam ahead folks!
Thank you for your extensive concenrn for all of us who are suffering. I for one am suffering from tinnitus in both ears,thousands or millions will benefit from your drug. Just email me if there is anything that i can do to answer, if you may have some questions. Hoping for the best on your study and research.
I am very interested in the new research you are conducting with regrowth of the hair’s that seem to control our hearing.
I currently use a pair of oticon aids and was reading about there latest hearing aids.
Thanking you this is most interesting news.
Russell Melling
I experienced sudden hearing loss in November, 2009 resulting in single sided hearing. Dr. Brian E. Duff, a physician at University Otolaryngology in East Greenwich, RI, in an attempt to restore the hearing in my left ear, administered weekly steroid injections through the membrane into my eardrum for six weeks. This was unsuccessful. Ultimately, Dr. Duff implanted an abutment for a bone conducting Cochlear Baha5 implant. I’ve continued to follow advancements in hearing restoration in the hope of recovering hearing in that hear. The hearing in my “good” ear has remained stable for the past 7 years other than the normal loss due to aging. Please, contact me with a response as to whether I would be a good candidate for the procedure described above.
To the author(s): Please contact me regarding participation as a test subject. Over the years, I have progressively lost both inner and outer hair cell function – the etiology being hereditary. I now have a very severe bilateral hearing loss. I am a research audiologist, musician, and professional sound engineer, and so I can comment about results in a skilled manner.
Hi Lawrence, the duration and nature of your hearing loss strongly suggests that there is a lot of activity at the cortical levels for your ability to understand and appreciate quality of sounds. You have managed to superbly bypass the traditional neuronal function, and use enhanced cognitive resources to hear and understand better. This happens with older patients who have had sustained hearing loss due to genetic consequences. Its more brain function for you and less cochlear involvement. Yes, you should participate as a subject because your description will be more relevant and accurate compared to a patient with less hearing experience!