Hearing loss and tinnitus: association studies for complex-hearing disorders in mouse and man

被引:0
|
作者
Ely Cheikh Boussaty
Rick Adam Friedman
Royce E. Clifford
机构
[1] University of California San Diego,School of Health Sciences, Division of Otolaryngology
[2] VA Hospitals San Diego,Research Department
[3] Harvard School of Public Health,Visiting Scientist, Department of Environmental Health
来源
Human Genetics | 2022年 / 141卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) provide an unbiased first look at genetic loci involved in aging and noise-induced sensorineural hearing loss and tinnitus. The hearing phenotype, whether audiogram-based or self-report, is regressed against genotyped information at representative single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) across the genome. Findings include the fact that both hearing loss and tinnitus are polygenic disorders, with up to thousands of genes, each of effect size of < 0.02. Smaller human GWAS’ were able to use objective measures and identified a few loci; however, hundreds of thousands of participants have been required for the statistical power to identify significant variants, and GWAS is unable to assess rare variants with mean allele frequency < 1%. Animal studies are required as well because of inability to access the human cochlea. Mouse GWAS builds on linkage techniques and the known phenotypic differences in auditory function between inbred strains. With the advantage that the laboratory environment can be controlled for noise and aging, the Hybrid Mouse Diversity Panel (HDMP) combines 100 strains sequenced at high resolution. Lift-over regions between mice and humans have identified over 17,000 homologous genes. Since most significant SNPs are either intergenic or in introns, and binding sites between species are poorly preserved between species, expression quantitative trait locus information is required to bring humans and mice into agreement. Transcriptome-wide analysis studies (TWAS) can prioritize putative causal genes and tissues. Diverse species, each making a distinct contribution, carry a synergistic advantage in the quest for treatment and ultimate cure of sensorineural hearing difficulties.
引用
收藏
页码:981 / 990
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Hearing loss and tinnitus: association studies for complex-hearing disorders in mouse and man
    Boussaty, Ely Cheikh
    Friedman, Rick Adam
    Clifford, Royce E.
    HUMAN GENETICS, 2022, 141 (3-4) : 981 - 990
  • [2] Association of Sleep Characteristics with Tinnitus and Hearing Loss
    Awad, Matthew
    Abdalla, Ibrahim
    Jara, Sebastian M.
    Huang, Tina C.
    Adams, Meredith E.
    Choi, Janet S.
    OTO OPEN, 2024, 8 (01)
  • [3] Hearing disorders and tinnitus
    Schwab, B
    Lenarz, T
    INTERNIST, 2001, 42 (01): : 131 - 133
  • [4] Hearing Loss and Tinnitus
    Shapiro, Scott B.
    Noij, Kimberley S.
    Naples, James G.
    Samy, Ravi N.
    MEDICAL CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, 2021, 105 (05) : 799 - 811
  • [5] Presence of tinnitus and tinnitus-related hearing loss in temporomandibular disorders
    Cebi, Ahmet Taylan
    CRANIO-THE JOURNAL OF CRANIOMANDIBULAR & SLEEP PRACTICE, 2023, 41 (02): : 173 - 177
  • [6] Association Between Childhood Hearing Disorders and Tinnitus in Adulthood
    Aarhus, Lisa
    Engdahl, Bo
    Tambs, Kristian
    Kvestad, Ellen
    Hoffman, Howard J.
    JAMA OTOLARYNGOLOGY-HEAD & NECK SURGERY, 2015, 141 (11) : 983 - 989
  • [7] Tinnitus and Patterns of Hearing Loss
    Tan, Christine M.
    Lecluyse, Wendy
    McFerran, Don
    Meddis, Ray
    JARO-JOURNAL OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR RESEARCH IN OTOLARYNGOLOGY, 2013, 14 (02): : 275 - 282
  • [8] Vertigo, hearing loss, and tinnitus
    Raza, SA
    Phillipps, JJ
    POSTGRADUATE MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1998, 74 (872) : 375 - 377
  • [10] Tinnitus and Patterns of Hearing Loss
    Christine M. Tan
    Wendy Lecluyse
    Don McFerran
    Ray Meddis
    Journal of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology, 2013, 14 : 275 - 282