New gene makes the difference in Usher syndrome
July 2010
Editor: You may know that Usher Syndrome (USH), which is responsible for
about half of all cases of deaf-blindness, is a recessive genetic condition.
It turns out that it's more complicated than that, as these researchers have
discovered.
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New gene makes the difference: genetic modifier in Usher Syndrome
explains variability in symptoms and will lead to better diagnosis
Usher syndrome (USH), an inherited condition involving both hearing and
vision loss, is not simply a recessively inherited disease, a scientist will
tell the annual conference of the European Society of Human Genetics
tomorrow (Saturday). Dr. Hanno Bolz, Associate Medical Director of the
Bioscientia Centre for Human Genetics, Ingelheim, Germany, and active in
teaching and research at the University Hospital of Cologne, will say that
his team's research challenges the traditional view that USH was inherited
as a single gene disorder, and shows that it may result from at least two
different genetic mutations. This could lead to more accurate diagnosis of
this condition, which is responsible for up to 10% of all cases of childhood
deafness and 50% of all deaf/blindness in adults.
Some USH patients have only one mutant copy of an Usher gene, which in
itself is insufficient to explain a recessive disease, and there is often an
unexplained variability of the visual characteristics of the condition, even
between close family members. Dr. Bolz's team, including scientists from
Cologne University, Germany and zebrafish researchers from the University of
Oregon, USA, decided to look for additional USH genes and genetic modifiers
that could be involved in disease causation.
"We became interested in researching sensory diseases such as Usher
syndrome because they can be very debilitating and affect people at a young
age", said Dr. Bolz. "Despite extensive research into USH, there is
currently no effective treatment for it."
Apart from linkage studies of recessive disease, where a particular trait
or disease characteristic is traced within a family, another way of
identifying genes linked to disease is to analyse genes that encode proteins
which are similar to the proteins involved in the disorder being studied.
Using a genome-wide database search, the team identified a gene, PDZD7,
which encoded a protein with striking similarity to the proteins whirlin and
harmonin, both known to be involved in USH.
"We found that some patients with only a single mutation of the gene
responsible for the condition, GRP98, also had a mutant copy of PDZD7, and
that this gene interacts with proteins involved in USH", said Dr. Bolz. "We
were able to validate these findings in transgenic zebrafish, and to show
that PDZD7 localises to cilia, thus providing further confirmation that USH
is a retinal ciliopathy."
Cilia are antenna-like protuberances that project from cells and are
often involved in sensory activity such as vision, hearing or smell. Genetic
mutations can affect their proper functioning, and these defects in turn
affect critical signalling pathways essential to cell development. As a
result, cilia defects are involved in many diseases which produce multiple
symptoms.
Diagnosis of USH is complicated, the scientists say. At present it is
normally related to clinical symptoms, such as childhood hearing impairment
and the vision disease retinitis pigmentosa in the first or second decade of
life. Retinitis pigmentosa affects the layer of light-sensitive tissue in
the retina and vision loss occurs as the light-sensing cells gradually
deteriorate, causing blind spots which eventually merge to produce tunnel
vision and sometimes total blindness.
"When hearing and visual loss are both present, the most likely diagnosis
is Usher syndrome", said Dr. Bolz. "More precise genetic diagnosis is
essential, but the genes are large and not easily accessible to genetic
testing. However, by considering clinical data of the patient and the
background of his/her family - ethnicity, for example - one can apply
efficient testing strategies. For the parents of a deaf child, it would be
advantageous to be aware of the retinal degeneration that will occur later
on.
"Research on new Usher genes must therefore be translated quickly into
genetic testing in order to aid parents to choose appropriate therapies to
diminish the later consequences of the disease," he said. The decision to
opt for a cochlear implant, for example, could be influenced by the
knowledge as to whether the causative mutation is in a gene for isolated
deafness or in a USH gene.
"We believe that our work may serve as a paradigm for the future", said
Dr. Bolz. "In many recessive diseases, variability of disease
characteristics is the rule rather than the exception, and in most cases
this phenomenon is unexplained. With advances in new sequencing techniques
that permit simultaneous analysis of several genes, we will need to
interpret variants in all Usher genes in a patient, not only in one. Two
hits in a single Usher gene may explain the disease in a patient, but not
its variability. Our research is a step on the road to understanding that
variability and to being able to provide an accurate prognosis of disease
progression."