Gene Mutation That Causes Rare Form of Deafness
Identified
July 2010
Editor: Researchers at the University of Michigan have identified a gene
mutation that causes auditory neuropathy. Here's the report.
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Researchers have identified a gene mutation that causes a rare form of
hearing loss known as auditory neuropathy, according to U-M Medical School
scientists.
In the study published online in the Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences, U-M's Marci Lesperance, M.D., and Margit Burmeister, Ph.D. led
a team of researchers who examined the DNA of individuals from the same
large family afflicted with the disorder.
The researchers identified a mutation in the DIAPH3 gene that causes
over-production of a compound known as a diaphanous protein. In previous
studies, hearing loss has been linked to a related gene that also affects a
diaphanous protein.
Currently, diagnosing auditory neuropathy requires specific testing.
Auditory neuropathy may be unrecognized if testing is not performed early in
life.
"Since we previously knew of only two genes associated with auditory
neuropathy, finding this gene mutation is significant," says Lesperance,
professor in U-M's Department of Otolaryngology and chief of the Division of
Pediatric Otolaryngology.
"This discovery will be helpful in developing genetic tests in the
future, which will be useful not only for this family, but for all patients
with auditory neuropathy," Lesperance says.
To investigate the role of these compounds in auditory function, the
authors engineered a line of fruit flies that expressed an overactive
diaphanous protein in the insects' auditory organ. Using sound to induce
measurable voltage changes, Frances Hannan of New York Medical College
determined that the flies' hearing was significantly degraded compared to
normal flies.
Burmeister says finding the genes causing such rare disorders is very
difficult because researchers cannot look at many different families, and
instead have to rely on a single family that is often not large enough. But
in this study, the researchers used a multi-pronged approach. Rather than
relying purely on genetic inheritance information, they combined this
information with biological function regarding gene activity.
"The approach we used here of combining genetic inheritance with
functional information can be applied to identify the culprit genes in many
other rare genetic diseases that have so far been impossible to nail down,"
says Burmeister, professor of Psychiatry and Human Genetics. "We can now say
we have a tool by combining several genomic approaches to find these genes."
Burmeister, Lesperance and colleagues are actively recruiting research
subjects for studies to identify genes involved in genetic hearing loss and
also for inherited neurological disorders. Those interested can sign up at
www.umengage.org after searching on keywords neurological, deafness or
hearing loss.
Additional authors include: Michael Hortsch, associate professor of Cell
and Developmental Biology at the University of Michigan; Marc C. Thorne,
assistant professor of Otolaryngology; Cynthia J. Schoen, Elzbieta Sliwerska,
Jameson Arnett and Sarah B. Emery, all of U-M; and Frances Hannan and Hima
R. Ammana of New York Medical College.
Funding: National Institutes of Health, Children's Hearing Foundation of
New York.