Surgery-free video-oculography in mouse models: enabling quantitative and short-interval longitudinal assessment of vestibular function

  • Xiaojie Yang
  • , Shiyue Zhou
  • , Jiaojiao Wu
  • , Qun Liao
  • , Changquan Wang
  • , Minghua Liu
  • , Lei Qu
  • , Yuan Zhang
  • , Cheng Cheng
  • , Renjie Chai
  • , Kun Zhang
  • , Xiaojie Yu
  • , Pingbo Huang
  • , Lian Liu
  • , Wei Xiong
  • , Shi Chen
  • , Fangyi Chen*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) responding to acceleration stimuli is originated from the vestibular apparatuses and thus widely used as an in vivo indicator of the vestibular function. We have developed a vestibular function testing (VFT) system that allows to evaluate VOR response with improved efficiency. The previously required surgical procedure has been avoided by using a newly designed animal-immobility setup. The efficacy of our VFT system was demonstrated on the mice with vestibular abnormalities caused by either genetic mutations (Lhfpl5 −/− or Cdh23 −/− ) or applied vestibulotoxicant (3,3′-iminodipropionitrile, IDPN). Daily longitudinal inspection of the VOR response in the IDPN-administered mice gives the first VOR-based daily-progression profile of the vestibular impairment. The capability of VOR in quantifying the severity of toxicant-induced vestibular deficits has been also demonstrated. The acquired VOR-measurement results were validated against the corresponding behavioral-test results. Further validation against immunofluorescence microscopy was applied to the VOR data obtained from the IDPN-administered mice. We conclude that the improved efficiency of our surgery-free VFT system, firstly, enables the characterization of VOR temporal dynamics and quantification of vestibular-impairment severity that may reveal useful information in toxicological and/or pharmaceutical studies; and, secondly, confers our system promising potential to serve as a high-throughput screener for identifying genes and drugs that affect vestibular function.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)212-218
Number of pages7
JournalNeuroscience Letters
Volume696
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 23 Mar 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • 3,3′-iminodipropionitrile (IDPN)
  • Behavioral assay
  • Genetic screen
  • Mouse model
  • Ototoxicity
  • Vestibular function
  • Vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR)
  • Video-oculography (VOG)

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