Cx26 heterozygous mutations cause hyperacusis-like hearing oversensitivity and increase susceptibility to noise.
Li-Man LiuChun LiangJin ChenShu FangHong-Bo ZhaoPublished in: Science advances (2023)
Gap junction gene GJB2 (Cx26) mutations cause >50% of nonsyndromic hearing loss. Its recessive hetero-mutation carriers, who have no deafness, occupy ~10 to 20% of the general population. Here, we report an unexpected finding that these heterozygote carriers have hearing oversensitivity, and active cochlear amplification increased. Mouse models show that Cx26 hetero-deletion reduced endocochlear potential generation in the cochlear lateral wall and caused outer hair cell electromotor protein prestin compensatively up-regulated to increase active cochlear amplification and hearing sensitivity. The increase of active cochlear amplification also increased sensitivity to noise; exposure to daily-level noise could cause Cx26 +/- mice permanent hearing threshold shift, leading to hearing loss. This study demonstrates that Cx26 recessive heterozygous mutations are not "harmless" for hearing as previously considered and can cause hyperacusis-like hearing oversensitivity. The data also indicate that GJB2 hetero-mutation carriers are vulnerable to noise and should avoid noise exposure in daily life.
Keyphrases
- metabolic syndrome
- hearing loss
- air pollution
- insulin resistance
- nucleic acid
- early onset
- mouse model
- physical activity
- intellectual disability
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- autism spectrum disorder
- single cell
- dna methylation
- electronic health record
- cell therapy
- adipose tissue
- deep learning
- big data
- amino acid
- genome wide identification