Genetic loci identified for high-frequency hearing loss
Editor: Many older adults suffer from hearing loss, and it tends to be
concentrated in the high frequencies. Called presbycusis, this type of
hearing loss may have a genetic basis. Recent studies have identified two
locations that may contribute to high frequency hearing loss.
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May 2012
The genetics responsible for frequency-specific hearing loss have
remained elusive until recently, when genetic loci were found that affected
high-frequency hearing. Now, a study published today in the open access
journal BMC Genetics reports, for the first time, genetic loci with effects
that are limited to specific portions of the hearing frequency map,
particularly those that are most affected in ageing-related hearing loss.
Presbycusis is the loss of hearing for high-pitched sounds that gradually
occurs in most individuals as they grow older. Although many genetic loci
have been linked to hearing deficits in humans, many loci that contribute to
tonotopy, i.e. the organization of the auditory system that permits
detection and discrimination of sounds of different frequency, remain
undiscovered.
A group from the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication
Disorders (NIDCD) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), used
genome-wide linkage analysis in NIH Swiss mice to successfully identify two
quantitative trait loci that affect hearing at high frequencies - Hfhl1 and
Hfhl3. Specifically the effect of the locus Hfhl1 is thought to be confined
to hearing frequencies from 25-44kHz of the tonotopic map, whilst Hfhl3 is
restricted to the 35-44kHz region.
Lead author James M Keller commented, "Our results support the hypothesis
that frequency-specific hearing loss results from variation in gene activity
along the cochlear partition and suggest a strategy for creating a map of
genes that influence differences in hearing sensitivity and or vulnerability
in restricted portions of the cochlea."
He continued, "The high-frequency hearing loss loci, Hfhl1 and Hfhl3,
explain only a portion of the variation in high-frequency hearing loss
observed in these mice. Other loci, and cross talk between genes at
different loci, probably account for much of the remainder - in fact we
detected a number of additional loci that could account for some of the
residual variation. Additional genotyping and analysis could greatly
increase our understanding of the genetic architecture of the HFHL
phenotype."
Source: BioMed Central