| Literature DB >> 24086324 |
Kerry A Miller1, Louise H Williams, Hans-Henrik M Dahl, Shehnaaz S M Manji.
Abstract
Animal models that recapitulate human disease are proving to be an invaluable tool in the identification of novel disease-associated genes. These models can improve our understanding of the complex genetic mechanisms involved in disease and provide a basis to guide therapeutic strategies to combat these conditions. We have identified a novel mouse model of non-syndromic sensorineural hearing loss with linkage to a region on chromosome 18. Eeyore mutant mice have early onset progressive hearing impairment and show abnormal structure of the sensory epithelium from as early as 4 weeks of age. Ultrastructural and histological analyses show irregular hair cell structure and degeneration of the sensory hair bundles in the cochlea. The identification of new genes involved in hearing is central to understanding the complex genetic pathways involved in the hearing process and the loci at which these pathways are interrupted in people with a genetic hearing loss. We therefore discuss possible candidate genes within the linkage region identified in eeyore that may underlie the deafness phenotype in these mice. Eeyore provides a new model of hereditary sensorineural deafness and will be an important tool in the search for novel deafness genes.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24086324 PMCID: PMC3781070 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0074243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Hearing Profile (A) and middle ear bone dissections (B–C) of eeyore mice.
ABR thresholds of hearing (grey bars) and deaf (black bars) eeyore littermates at 4 (*p = 4.8×10−10) and 24 (**p = 1.2×10−10) weeks of age. The ossicles appear largely normal in deaf mice (C), comparable to normal morphology of the malleus, incus and stapes in normal hearing mice (B). M; manubrium of malleus, A; articulation surfaces of malleus and incus joint, T; tubercle, G; gonial angle, LI; attachment points of suspensory ligaments of incus, LP; lenticular process, C; capitulum of stapes, V; arched ventral crus, F; footplate. Scale bar: 1 mm.
Figure 2Haematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) staining of cochlea sections from 8 week old hearing (A–C) and 8–24 week deaf (D–L) mice at the apical, middle and basal levels.
Normal cochlear morphology shows an intact organ of Corti and the presence of a tunnel containing inner and outer hair cells and intact spiral ganglion and stria vascularis (B). Collapse of the tunnel of Corti is evident by 8 weeks at the basal level in deaf mice (arrow in F), and degeneration of the spiral ganglion is apparent at the basal level by 12 weeks of age (asterix in I). SG, spiral ganglion; OHC, outer hair cells; IHC, inner hair cells; OC, organ of Corti; BM, basilar membrane. Scale bar: 100 μM.
Figure 3Scanning electron micrographs of cochlear sensory epithelium from 12–14 week old hearing (A, E and I) and deaf (B–D, F–H, J–L) mice at the apical, middle and basal cochlear level.
OHC bundles are disorganised and misorientated at the middle and basal levels of the cochlea. Bundles are completely missing at the basal level at this age. IHC have an abnormal morphology, appearing ‘OHC-like’ in structure. OHC, outer hair cells; IHC, inner hair cells. Scale bar: 10 μM (A, B, E, F, I and J), 2 μM (C, D, G, H, K and L).
Figure 4SNP mapping of the mutation in eeyore mice.
DNA from 3 hearing (H) and 8 of 16 deaf (D) mice were analysed for SNP markers on chromosome 18, which are listed in the first column and indicate megabase position (4.6–40.3 Mb). The mouse identification numbers and phenotypes are indicated at the top of each column. The genotype of each mouse is either homozygous for C57BL/6 (black) or BALB/c (white) or heterozygous (grey) for that marker. On the right is a diagram of mouse chromosome 18 showing the interval to which the deafness phenotype mapped to.
Top-ranked candidate genes in the eeyore genetic interval.
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| NM_001650.4 | 5 | Rev | 18: 15,547,903–15,562,193 | Aquaporin 4 | Mercurial-insensitive water channel | Neuromyelitis optica |
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| NM_008720.2 | 25 | Rev | 18: 12,348,202–12,394,909 | Niemann Pick type C1 | Vesicular trafficking at nerve terminals | Niemann-Pick disease type C1 |
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| NM_013697.5 | 4 | For | 18: 20,823,751–20,832,825 | Transthyretin | Thyroxine plasma transport protien | Amyloidosis |
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| NM_133658.1 | 15 | For | 18: 32,399,954–32,429,805 | Excision repair cross-complementing rodent repair deficiency, complementation group 3 | DNA repair, Transcription | Xeroderma pigmentosum group B |
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| NM_021367.2 | 5 | For | 18: 32,975,037–32,979,453 | Thymic stromal lymphoprotein | Inflammation response | Eosinophilic esophagitis |
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| NM_030596.3 | 16 | For | 18: 20,668,805–20,699,811 | Desmoglein 3 | Cell-cell adhesion | Pemphigus Vulgaris |
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| NM_007664.4 | 16 | Rev | 18: 16,747,386–16,967,755 | Cadherin 2, N-cadherin | Calcium-ion-dependent adhesion | Neuroblastoma |
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| NM_153087.2 | 3 | For | 18: 13,165,499–13,181,391 | Hystamine H4 receptor | G-protein coupled receptor | None known |
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| NM_181414.5 | 25 | For | 18: 30,432,401–30,507,780 | Phosphoinositide-3-kinase, class 3 | Receptor-mediated signal transduction, intracellular trafficking | None known |
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| NM_010680.1 | 75 | For | 18: 12,492,533–12,741,522 | Laminin, alpha 3 | Cell adhesion | Junctional epidermolysis bullosa, Laryngoonychocutaneous syndrome |
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| NM_032394.3 | 47 | Rev | 18: 32,118,888–32,196,615 | Myosin VIIb | Molecular motor | None known |
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