Critical molecules for hearing and balance discovered
November 2011
Researchers have found long-sought genes in the sensory hair cells of the
inner ear that, when mutated, prevent sound waves from being converted to
electric signals - a fundamental first step in hearing. The team, co-led
byJeffrey Holt, PhD, in the department of otolaryngology at Children's
Hospital Boston, and Andrew Griffith, MD, PhD, of the NIH's National
Institute on Deafness and other Communication Disorders (NIDCD), then
restored these electrical signals in the sensory cells of deaf mice by
introducing normal genes.
The study paves the way for a test of gene therapy to reverse a type of
deafness, to be conducted by Holt and Swiss collaborators. Findings appear
in the November 21 online issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation.
Sound waves produce the sensation of hearing by jiggling protruding
hair-like structures on sensory hair cells in the inner ear. Scientists have
long believed that the hair cells carry a protein that converts this
mechanical motion into electrical signals. While similar proteins have been
identified for other senses - taste, smell, sight - researchers had been
unable to find the critical protein required for hearing, in part because of
the difficulty of getting enough cells from the inner ear to study.
"People have been looking for more than 30 years," says Holt, also a
member of the F.M. Kirby Neurobiology Center at Children's Hospital Boston.
"Five or six possibilities have come up, but didn't pan out."
Holt, Griffith and colleagues found that two related proteins, TMC1 and
TMC2, are essential for hearing. They make up gateways known as ion
channels, which sit atop the hair-like projections (called stereocilia) and
let electrically charged molecules (ions) move in to the cell, generating an
electrical signal that ultimately travels to the brain.
The gene for TMC1 was previously shown by Griffith and NIDCD-funded
collaborators to be mutated in both mice and humans with hereditary
deafness. TMC2, the new study found, seems to have a redundant function and
may compensate if TMC1 is defective.
The study also found that the same defects affect sensory hair cells in
the vestibular system, which underlies the sense of balance. Although TMC1
mutations cause only hearing loss, not balance problems, in humans, mice
with defects in both TMC1 and TMC2 are deaf and fail balance tests requiring
them to navigate a rotating rod.
The investigators then engineered an adenovirus to carry normal copies of
TMC1 or TMC2 into the inner-ear hair cells of mice that had mutations in
both genes. Using special techniques developed in Holt's lab, they recorded
electrical responses to noise in the sensory hair cells when either TMC1 or
TMC2 was added back - where before there had been none. "This is the first
time anything like this has been done," says Holt.
But does restoring the electrical response translate into restoration of
hearing? Holt and collaborators at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de
Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland recently received a $600,000 grant for a
gene-therapy trial in mice. The researchers will deliver genes to the inner
ear and measure whether electrical signals can be detected in the 8th
cranial nerve and whether the animals respond to sound. EPFL will supply
newer, safer gene-delivery vectors for testing that could potentially be
developed for human trials.
According to the NIDCD, about 1 in 300 to 500 newborns are born deaf or
hard-of-hearing, and it's believed that about half of cases have genetic
causes. About 60 genes, including TMC1, are known to be associated with
human deafness.
The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Hazel
Thorpe Carman & George Gay Carman Trust for Scientific Research.Yoshiyuki
Kawashima, Gwenaelle S.G. Geleoc and Kiyoto Kurima were co-first authors.
Jeffrey Holt, formerly at the University of Virginia, andAndrew Griffith
were co-senior authors.
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SOURCE Children's Hospital Boston