Van Laer Lut, Carlsson Per-Inge, Ottschytsch Natacha, Bondeson Marie-Louise, Konings Annelies, Vandevelde Ann, Dieltjens Nele, Fransen Erik, Snyders Dirk, Borg Erik, Raes Adam, Van Camp Guy
Department of Medical Genetics, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium.
Hum Mutat. 2006 Aug;27(8):786-95. doi: 10.1002/humu.20360.
Noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) is one of the most important occupational diseases and, after presbyacusis, the most frequent cause of hearing loss. NIHL is a complex disease caused by an interaction between environmental and genetic factors. The various environmental factors involved in NIHL have been relatively extensively studied. On the other hand, little research has been performed on the genetic factors responsible for NIHL. To test whether the variation in genes involved in coupling of cells and potassium recycling in the inner ear might partly explain the variability in susceptibility to noise, we performed a case-control association study using 35 SNPs selected in 10 candidate genes on a total of 218 samples selected from a population of 1,261 Swedish male noise-exposed workers. We have obtained significant differences between susceptible and resistant individuals for the allele, genotype, and haplotype frequencies for three SNPs of the KCNE1 gene, and for the allele frequencies for one SNP of KCNQ1 and one SNP of KCNQ4. Patch-clamp experiments in high K+-concentrations using a Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell model were performed to investigate the possibility that the KCNE1-p.85N variant (NT_011512.10:g.21483550G>A; NP_00210.2:p.Asp85Asn) was causative for high noise susceptibility. The normalized current density generated by KCNQ1/KCNE1-p.85N channels, thus containing the susceptibility variant, differed significantly from that from wild-type channels. Furthermore, the midpoint potential of KCNQ1/KCNE1-p.85N channels (i.e., the voltage at which 50% of the channels are open) differed from that of wild-type channels. Further genetic and physiological studies will be necessary to confirm these findings.
噪声性听力损失(NIHL)是最重要的职业病之一,也是继老年性耳聋之后导致听力损失最常见的原因。NIHL是一种由环境因素与遗传因素相互作用引起的复杂疾病。与NIHL相关的各种环境因素已得到较为广泛的研究。另一方面,针对导致NIHL的遗传因素的研究却很少。为了检验内耳中参与细胞耦合和钾循环的基因变异是否可能部分解释对噪声易感性的差异,我们进行了一项病例对照关联研究,在1261名瑞典男性噪声暴露工人的群体中选取了218个样本,对10个候选基因中的35个单核苷酸多态性(SNP)进行检测。我们发现,KCNE1基因的3个SNP的等位基因、基因型和单倍型频率,以及KCNQ1基因的1个SNP和KCNQ4基因的1个SNP的等位基因频率,在易感性个体和抗性个体之间存在显著差异。利用中国仓鼠卵巢(CHO)细胞模型,在高钾浓度下进行膜片钳实验,以研究KCNE1-p.85N变异体(NT_011512.10:g.21483550G>A;NP_00210.2:p.Asp85Asn)导致高噪声易感性的可能性。包含易感性变异体的KCNQ1/KCNE1-p.85N通道产生的标准化电流密度与野生型通道产生的电流密度有显著差异。此外,KCNQ1/KCNE1-p.85N通道的中点电位(即50%的通道开放时的电压)与野生型通道不同。需要进一步的遗传学和生理学研究来证实这些发现。