PubMed 16549283
Referenced in: none
Automatically associated channels: ClC4
Title: Influence of gain of function epithelial chloride channel ClC-Kb mutation on hearing thresholds.
Authors: Andreas Frey, Angelika Lampert, Siegfried Waldegger, Nikola Jeck, Petra Waldegger, Ferruh Artunc, Guiscard Seebohm, Undine E Lang, Susan Kupka, Markus Pfister, Julia Hoppe, Christian Gerloff, Elke Schaeffeler, Matthias Schwab, Florian Lang
Journal, date & volume: Hear. Res., 2006 Apr , 214, 68-75
PubMed link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16549283
Abstract
Hearing depends on functional ClC-K-type chloride channels composed of barttin with ClC-Ka or ClC-Kb. Loss-of-function mutations of the barttin gene BSND or of both, the ClC-Ka gene CLNKA and the ClC-Kb gene CLNKB lead to congenital deafness and renal salt wasting. Recently, we identified the gain-of-function mutation ClC-Kb(T481S) which is associated with increased blood pressure. To explore the impact of ClC-Kb(T481S) on hearing, healthy volunteers (n=329) and individuals suffering from tinnitus (n=246) volunteered for hearing tests (n=348) and genetic analysis (n=575). 19.1% of the individuals were heterozygote (ClC-Kb(T481S)/ClC-Kb) and 1.7% homozygote carriers. Pure tone average hearing threshold (PTAt) for air conduction was significantly (p<0.033) lower in ClC-Kb(T481S) carriers (13.2+/-1.2dB) than in wild-type individuals (17.1+/-0.9dB). The prevalence of ClC-Kb(T481S) carriers was significantly increased (29.7%) in individuals with PTAt<15dB (p<0.05) and significantly decreased (13.2%) in individuals with PTAt>30 dB (p<0.017). The difference was largely due to the female population. Bone conduction was less affected pointing to an effect of the mutation on middle ear function. Tinnitus tended to be more frequent in ClC-Kb(T481S) carriers, a difference, however, not statistically significant. In conclusion, hearing thresholds are slightly lower in carriers of ClC-Kb(T481S), i.e., the gain-of-function polymorphism ClC-Kb(T481S) exerts a subtle but significant protective effect against hearing loss.