New mouse mutant contains clue to progressive hearing
loss
Editor: Scientists continue to discover genes that are related to
hearing loss, and to use that knowledge to move closer to a cure. Here's
the latest report on work being done at the Wellcome Trust Sanger
Institute in Cambridge, UK.
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November 2008
Researchers have defined a mutation in the mouse genome that mimics
progressive hearing loss in humans. A team from the Wellcome Trust Sanger
Institute in Cambridge, UK, working with colleagues in Munich and Padua,
found that mice carrying a mutation called Oblivion displayed problems
with the function of hair cells in the inner ear, occurring before clear
physical effects are seen. The study is published October 31 in the
open-access journal PLoS Genetics.
Progressive loss of hearing affects around six out of ten people over
the age of 70. Whilst environmental causes can contribute, genetic
influences also play a major role. Although we know of many genes involved
in deafness in childhood, most of these genes contribute only rarely to
progressive hearing loss in humans and their role is poorly understood.
The team found that the Oblivion mutation showed features in common
with forms of human deafness. In mice with one mutant copy of the Oblivion
gene, the hair cells showed some function at first but later degenerated;
in mice with two mutant copies, the hair cells were already damaged at
birth.
"When we mapped the mutation to the mouse genome, we quickly found a
probable cause for hearing loss," explains senior author Professor Karen
Steel. "We showed that the mutant mice carried a change in one letter of
their genetic code in a gene called Atp2b2. Changing a specific C to a T
in this gene stops it from producing a normal molecular pump that is
needed to keep hair cells in the ear working efficiently by pumping excess
calcium out of the cell."
Although other mutations have been described, Oblivion is unique in the
way it leads to hearing loss due to mutations in Atp2b2, a gene which has
previously been implicated in hearing loss in humans. "One aim of
identifying and characterizing mice with impaired hearing is to help us to
understand the biology of this remarkable sense," says Professor Steel.
"Improving our understanding of the molecular and cellular action of
genetic variants will help us to develop improved diagnostics and improved
treatments for humans."