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Publication : Thyroid hormone receptor beta is essential for development of auditory function.

First Author  Forrest D Year  1996
Journal  Nat Genet Volume  13
Issue  3 Pages  354-7
PubMed ID  8673137 Mgi Jnum  J:63101
Mgi Id  MGI:1860435 Doi  10.1038/ng0796-354
Citation  Forrest D, et al. (1996) Thyroid hormone receptor beta is essential for development of auditory function. Nat Genet 13(3):354-7
abstractText  Congenital thyroid disorders are often associated with profound deafness, indicating a requirement for thyroid hormone (T3) and its receptors in the development of hearing. Two T3 receptor genes, Tr alpha and Tr beta are differentially expressed, although in overlapping patterns, during development. Thus, the extent to which they mediate unique or redundant functions is unclear. We demonstrate that Tr beta-deficient (Thrb-/-) mice exhibit a permanent deficit in auditory function across a wide range of frequencies, although they show no other overt neurological defects. The auditory-evoked brainstem response (ABR) in Thrb-/- mice, although greatly diminished, displayed normal waveforms, which suggested that the primary defect resides in the cochlea. Although hypothyroidism causes cochlear malformation, there was no evidence of this in Thrb-/- mice. These findings suggest that Tr beta controls the maturation of auditory function but not morphogenesis of the cochlea. Thrb-/- mice provide a model for the human endocrine disorder of resistance to thyroid hormone (RTH), which is typically associated with dominant mutations in Tr beta. However, deafness is generally absent in RTH, indicating that dominant and recessive mutations in Tr beta have different consequences on the auditory system. Our results identify Tr beta as an essential transcription factor for auditory development and indicate that distinct Tr genes serve certain unique functions.
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