Impact of Rehydration Following Systemic Dehydration on Vocal Fold Gene Expression

Author:

Bailey Taylor W.1ORCID,do Nascimento Naila Cannes1ORCID,Santos Andrea P.2ORCID,Cox Abigail2ORCID,Sivasankar M. Preeti1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences Purdue University West Lafayette Indiana USA

2. Department of Comparative Pathobiology Purdue University West Lafayette Indiana USA

Abstract

ObjectiveBiological data on the beneficial effects of vocal fold rehydration are lacking. This study aimed to examine the effects of acute systemic dehydration on vocal fold gene expression and determine whether rehydration would reverse these changes.MethodsMale New Zealand White rabbits (N = 24, n = 8/group) provided the animal model. Systemic dehydration was induced by 5 days of water volume restriction. Rehydration was provided by ad‐lib water for 3 days following dehydration. Euhydrated rabbits were used as the control group. Vocal fold tissue was dissected. Seventeen genes were selected based on physiological function and role in supporting vocal fold structure, oxidative stress, hemodynamics, and extracellular matrix turnover. Relative gene expression was assessed by RT‐qPCR.ResultsRehydration following systemic dehydration can modulate gene expression, with expression patterns suggesting that rehydration reverses dehydration‐induced changes in over half of the tested genes. CLIC5 (chloride intracellular channel 5) and EFEMP1 (EGF containing fibulin extracellular matrix protein 1) genes were significantly upregulated in the dehydration group compared with the euhydrated control. A1BG (alpha‐1B‐glycoprotein) and IL1RAP (interleukin 1 receptor accessory protein) were downregulated by rehydration compared with the dehydration group.ConclusionThis study provides molecular evidence for a transcriptional response to rehydration following acute systemic dehydration in the vocal folds. These data are the first to study gene expression following realistic dehydration and rehydration paradigms and provide biological data to support clinical recommendations to increase water intake after acute dehydration.Level of EvidenceNA Laryngoscope, 133:3499–3505, 2023

Funder

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology

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