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Your Genes and Hearing Loss
One of the most common birth defects is hearing
loss or deafness (congenital), which can affect as many as three of every 1,000
babies born. Inherited genetic defects play an important role in congenital
hearing loss, contributing to about 60 percent of deafness occurring in infants.
Although exact data is not available, it is likely that genetics plays an
important role in hearing loss in the elderly. Inherited genetic defects are
just one factor that can lead to hearing loss and deafness, both of which may
occur at any stage of a persons lifespan. Other factors may include: medical
problems, environmental exposure, trauma, and medications.
The most common and useful distinction in hearing impairment is syndromic
versus non-syndromic.
- Non-syndromic hearing impairment accounts for the vast majority of
inherited hearing loss, approximately 70 percent. Autosomal- recessive
inheritance is responsible for about 80 percent of cases of non-syndromic
hearing impairment, while autosomal-dominant genes cause 20 percent, less than
two percent of cases are caused by X-linked and mitochondrial genetic
malfunctions.
- Syndromic(sin-DRO-mik) means that the hearing impairment is
associated with other clinical abnormalities. Among hereditary hearing
impairments, 15 to 30 percent are syndromic. Over 400 syndromes are known to
include hearing impairment and can be classified as: syndromes due to
cyotgenetic or chromosomal anomalies, syndromes transmitted in classical
monogenic or Mendelian inheritance, or syndromes due to multi-factorial
influences, and finally, syndromes due to a combination of genetic and
environmental factors.
Variable expression of different aspects of syndromes is common. Some aspects
may be expressed in a range from mild to severe or different combinations of
associated symptoms may be expressed in different individuals carrying the same
mutation within a single pedigree. An example of variable expressivity is seen
in families transmitting autosomal dominant Waardenburg syndrome. Within the
same family, some affected members may have dystopia canthorum (an unusually
wide nasal bridge due to sideways displacement of the inner angles of the eyes),
white forelock, heterochromia irides (two different-colored irises or two colors
in the same iris), and hearing loss, while others with the same mutation may
only have dystopia canthorum.
How do genes work?
Genes are a road map for the synthesis of proteins, which are the building
blocks for everything in the body: hair, eyes, ears, heart, lung, etc.
Every child inherits half of its genes from one parent and half from
the other parent. If the inherited genes are defective, a health disorder
such as hearing loss or deafness can result. Hearing disorders are inherited in
one of four ways:
- Autosomal Dominant Inheritance: For autosomal dominant
disorders, the transmission of a rare allele of a gene by a single
heterozygous parent is sufficient to generate an affected child. A
heterozygous parent has two types of the same gene (in this case, one mutated
and the other normal) and can produce two types of gametes (reproductive
cells). One gamete will carry the mutant form of the gene of interest, and the
other the normal form. Each of these gametes then has an equal chance of being
used to form the offspring. Thus the chance that the offspring of a parent
with an autosomal dominant gene will develop the disorder is 50 percent.
Autosomal dominant traits usually affect males and females equally.
- Autosomal Recessive Inheritance: An autosomal recessive trait
is characterized by having parents who are heterozygous carriers for mutant
forms of the gene in question but are not affected by the disorder. The
problem gene that would cause the disorder is suppressed by the normal gene.
These heterozygous parents (A/a) can each generate two types of gametes, one
carrying the mutant copy of the gene (a) and the other having a normal copy of
the gene (A). There are four possible combinations from each of the parents,
A/a, A/A, a/A, and a/a. Only the offspring that inherits both mutant copies
(a/a) will exhibit the trait. Overall, offspring of these two parents will
face a 25 percent chance of inheriting the disorder.
- X-linked Inheritance: A male offspring has an X chromosome and
a Y chromosome, while a female has two copies of the X chromosome only. Each
female inherits an X chromosome from her mother and her father. On
the other hand, each male inherits an X chromosome from his mother and a Y
chromosome from his father. In general, only one of the two X chromosomes
carried by a female is active in any one cell while the other is rendered
inactive. This is why when a female inherits a defective gene on one X
chromosome, the normal gene on the other X chromosome can usually compensate.
As males only have one copy of the X chromosome, any defective gene is more
likely to manifest into a disorder.
- Mitochondrial Inheritance: Mitochondrias, small powerhouses within
each cell, also contain their own DNA. Interestingly, the sperm does not have
any mitochondria, and consequently, only the mitochondria in the egg from the
mother can be passed from one generation to the next. This leads to an
interesting inheritance pattern where only affected mothers (and not affected
fathers as their sperms do not have mitochondria) can pass on a disease from
one generation to the next. Sensitivity to aminoglycoside antibiotics can be
inherited through a defect in mitochondrial DNA and is the most common cause
of deafness in China!
In the last decade, advances in molecular biology and genetics have
contributed substantially to the understanding of development, function, and
pathology of the inner ear. Researchers have identified several of the various
genes responsible for hereditary deafness or hearing loss, most notably the GJB2
gene mutation. As one of the most common genetic causes of hearing loss,
GJB2-related hearing loss is considered a recessive genetic disorder because the
mutations only cause deafness in individuals who inherit two copies of the
mutated gene, one from each parent. A person with one mutated copy and one
normal copy is a carrier but is not deaf. Screening tests for the GJB2 gene are
available for at risk individuals to help them determine their risk of having a
child with hearing problems.
© 2004 AAO-HNS/AAO-HNSF
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