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Discovering the Missing “LINC” to Deafness
Because half of all instances of hearing loss are linked to genetic mutations, advanced gene research is an invaluable tool for uncovering causes of deafness — and one of the biggest hopes for the development of new therapies. Now Prof. Karen Avraham of the Sackler Faculty of Medicine at Tel Aviv University has discovered a significant mutation in a LINC family protein — part of the cells of the inner ear — that could lead to new treatments for hearing disorders.
Her team of researchers, including Dr. Henning Horn and Profs. Colin Stewart and Brian Burke of the Institute of Medical Biology at A*STAR in Singapore, discovered that the mutation causes chaos in a cell’s anatomy. The cell nucleus, which contains our entire DNA, moves to the top of the cell rather than being anchored to the bottom, its normal place. Though this has little impact on the functioning of most of the body’s cells, it’s devastating for the cells responsible for hearing, explains Prof. Avraham. “The position of the nucleus is important for receiving the electrical signals that determine proper hearing,” she explains. “Without the ability to receive these signals correctly, the entire cascade of hearing fails.”
This discovery, recently reported in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, may be a starting point for the development of new therapies. In the meantime, the research could lead towards work on a drug that is able to mimic the mutated protein’s anchoring function, and restore hearing in some cases, she suggests.

Discovering the Missing “LINC” to Deafness

Because half of all instances of hearing loss are linked to genetic mutations, advanced gene research is an invaluable tool for uncovering causes of deafness — and one of the biggest hopes for the development of new therapies. Now Prof. Karen Avraham of the Sackler Faculty of Medicine at Tel Aviv University has discovered a significant mutation in a LINC family protein — part of the cells of the inner ear — that could lead to new treatments for hearing disorders.

Her team of researchers, including Dr. Henning Horn and Profs. Colin Stewart and Brian Burke of the Institute of Medical Biology at A*STAR in Singapore, discovered that the mutation causes chaos in a cell’s anatomy. The cell nucleus, which contains our entire DNA, moves to the top of the cell rather than being anchored to the bottom, its normal place. Though this has little impact on the functioning of most of the body’s cells, it’s devastating for the cells responsible for hearing, explains Prof. Avraham. “The position of the nucleus is important for receiving the electrical signals that determine proper hearing,” she explains. “Without the ability to receive these signals correctly, the entire cascade of hearing fails.”

This discovery, recently reported in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, may be a starting point for the development of new therapies. In the meantime, the research could lead towards work on a drug that is able to mimic the mutated protein’s anchoring function, and restore hearing in some cases, she suggests.

Filed under hearing hearing loss proteins LINC mutations genes genetics neuroscience science

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