| Literature DB >> 23345450 |
Denise Yan1, Yan Zhu, Tom Walsh, Dinghua Xie, Huijun Yuan, Asli Sirmaci, Taro Fujikawa, Ann Chi Yan Wong, Tze L Loh, Lilin Du, M'hamed Grati, Srdjan M Vlajkovic, Susan Blanton, Allen F Ryan, Zheng-Yi Chen, Peter R Thorne, Bechara Kachar, Mustafa Tekin, Hong-Bo Zhao, Gary D Housley, Mary-Claire King, Xue Z Liu.
Abstract
Age-related hearing loss and noise-induced hearing loss are major causes of human morbidity. Here we used genetics and functional studies to show that a shared cause of these disorders may be loss of function of the ATP-gated P2X(2) receptor (ligand-gated ion channel, purinergic receptor 2) that is expressed in sensory and supporting cells of the cochlea. Genomic analysis of dominantly inherited, progressive sensorineural hearing loss DFNA41 in a six-generation kindred revealed a rare heterozygous allele, P2RX2 c.178G > T (p.V60L), at chr12:133,196,029, which cosegregated with fully penetrant hearing loss in the index family, and also appeared in a second family with the same phenotype. The mutation was absent from more than 7,000 controls. P2RX2 p.V60L abolishes two hallmark features of P2X(2) receptors: ATP-evoked inward current response and ATP-stimulated macropore permeability, measured as loss of ATP-activated FM1-43 fluorescence labeling. Coexpression of mutant and WT P2X(2) receptor subunits significantly reduced ATP-activated membrane permeability. P2RX2-null mice developed severe progressive hearing loss, and their early exposure to continuous moderate noise led to high-frequency hearing loss as young adults. Similarly, among family members heterozygous for P2RX2 p.V60L, noise exposure exacerbated high-frequency hearing loss in young adulthood. Our results suggest that P2X(2) function is required for life-long normal hearing and for protection from exposure to noise.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23345450 PMCID: PMC3568371 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1222285110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205