'Modifier Gene' Makes Some Hearing Loss More Severe
July 2005
Editor: Scientists currently believe that about half of all cases of
congenital or childhood-onset hearing loss are due to genetic mutations.
Now they have verified that additional mutations can intensify the
hearing loss caused by other mutations. Here's the press release from
the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD).
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Scientists have identified a genetic mutation in humans that affects
the severity of hearing loss caused by a mutation of another gene.
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
scientists Drs. Julie Schultz and Andrew Griffith and co-authors at NIH*
and the Mayo Clinic Foundation reported their findings in the April 14
issue of The New England Journal of Medicine.
Genetic mutations are estimated to cause at least one half of all
cases of congenital or childhood-onset hearing loss. Individual
variations in the severity of hearing loss are common and typically
attributed to environmental factors and modifier genes - genes that
alter the clinical expression of a mutation in another gene.
In the current study, five adult siblings from the same family were
found to possess a mutant form of the gene that encodes for the protein
cadherin 23, which is required for the development of hair cells in the
inner ear. However, the degree of hearing loss among the siblings
varied. While three of the five individuals had severe to profound
deafness, the other two had hearing loss only in the higher frequencies.
This variability suggested the action of a modifier gene.
NIDCD scientists, led by Drs. Thomas Friedman and Konrad Noben-Trauth,
had previously discovered that mutations of the cadherin 23 gene cause
hearing loss in humans and mice. Dr. Noben-Trauth and his co-workers had
also shown that alterations of another gene, ATP2B2, can affect the
severity of hearing loss caused by a cadherin 23 mutant gene in mice.
ATP2B2 encodes for a key cellular protein, known as a plasma-membrane
calcium pump, that is thought to be important for regulating calcium
concentrations both around and within hair bundles of hair cells. On the
outside of the hair bundle, calcium is required to maintain the correct
structure of the hair bundles and on the inside it may act as an
important signaling or regulatory molecule.
In this study, Dr. Schultz and her co-workers found that a mutant
form of the human ATP2B2 gene, called V586M, accounted for the more
severe hearing loss in the siblings who were profoundly deaf. The two
siblings with better hearing were found to have normal copies of the
gene. About 1 in 20 Caucasians are carriers of V568M.
Although V568M does not cause hearing loss, the current findings
suggest that V568M may exacerbate hearing loss caused by environmental
factors or other genetic influences. Further research is needed to
determine the role of V568M and other mutations of the calcium pump in
hearing loss associated with advanced age, exposure to loud noise, and
mutations in other deafness genes.
*This research was also supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Institute, another component of the National Institutes of Health.