ePoster

OTOLITH-SPECIFIC VESTIBULAR DYSFUNCTION IN THE LE-DOUB RAT: A NEW MODEL FOR VESTIBULAR RESEARCH

Ana Renner Rodriguezand 1 co-author

Universitat de Barcelona

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS05-09AM-695

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS05-09AM-695

Poster preview

OTOLITH-SPECIFIC VESTIBULAR DYSFUNCTION IN THE LE-DOUB RAT: A NEW MODEL FOR VESTIBULAR RESEARCH poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS05-09AM-695

Abstract

A spontaneous mutation has led to the establishment of the LEDOUB (Long-Evans Defective Otoconia Universitat de Barcelona) rat line, which serves as a genetically defined model of vestibular loss. This novel model is characterized by complete absence of otoconia with preserved semicircular canal structure. Lack of otoconia in the otolithic membrane of the utricle and saccule impedes vestibular functions such as detection of head position and linear acceleration. Otolith-specific vestibular loss has primarily been studied in genetic mouse models, relying on global balance and motor tests. In the rat however, established anti-gravity reflex tests provide robust objective and quantitative measures of vestibular dysfunction. Preliminary anti-gravity reflex assays of LEDOUB rats reveal delayed and incomplete air-righting responses but roughly normal tail-lift reflexes, aligning with the predicted loss of otolith-driven input while preserving canal-mediated functions. Immunohistochemical and ultrastructural analyses confirm intact hair-cell organization and macular structure but a complete absence of otoconia. Dose-response experiments with the ototoxic compound 3,3'-iminodipropanenitrile (IDPN) show similar susceptibility across genotypes, indicating that macular hair-cell activity does not modulate ototoxic susceptibility to hair-cell loss. These findings support the hypothesis that selective loss of otolithic function produces dissociable deficits in otolith-dependent reflexes while sparing canal-mediated function, offering a new avenue to functionally differentiate otolith and canal contributions to vestibular sensory processing. Funding: European Union under Grant Agreement No. 101120139.

Recommended posters

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.