Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2817171 Gene 2013 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Nuclear factors participating in mitochondrial hearing loss are summarized.•Four modifier genes affect deafness phenotype manifestation with mtDNA.•Fourteen deafness-causing genes are reviewed.•Patterns show the roles, functions and possible connections among these factors.

Hearing loss (HL) is a common disorder with mitochondrial dysfunction as one of the major causes leading to deafness. Mitochondrial dysfunction may be caused by either mutations in nuclear genes leading to defective nuclear-encoded proteins or mutations in mitochondrial genes leading to defective mitochondrial-encoded products. The specific nuclear genes involved in HL can be classified into two categories depending on whether mitochondrial gene mutations co-exist (modifier genes) or not (deafness-causing genes). TFB1M, MTO1, GTPBP3, and TRMU are modifier genes. A mutation in any of these modifier genes may lead to a deafness phenotype when accompanied by the mitochondrial gene mutation. OPA1, TIMM8A, SMAC/DIABLO, MPV17, PDSS1, BCS1L, SUCLA2, C10ORF2, COX10, PLOG1and RRM2B are deafness-causing genes. A mutation in any of these deafness-causing genes will directly induce variable phenotypic HL.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Genetics
Authors
, , ,