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Publication : Molecular genetics of hearing loss.

First Author  Petit C Year  2001
Journal  Annu Rev Genet Volume  35
Pages  589-646 PubMed ID  11700295
Mgi Jnum  J:73996 Mgi Id  MGI:2157281
Doi  10.1146/annurev.genet.35.102401.091224 Citation  Petit C, et al. (2001) Molecular genetics of hearing loss. Annu Rev Genet 35:589-646
abstractText  Hereditary isolated hearing loss is genetically highly heterogeneous. Over 100 genes are predicted to cause this disorder in humans. Sixty loci have been reported and 24 genes underlying 28 deafness forms have been identified. The present epistemic stage in the realm consists in a preliminary characterization of the encoded proteins and the associated defective biological processes. Since for several of the deafness forms we still only have fuzzy notions of their pathogenesis, we here adopt a presentation of the various deafness forms based on the site of the primary defect: hair cell defects, nonsensory cell defects, and tectorial membrane anomalies. The various deafness forms so far studied appear as monogenic disorders. They are all rare with the exception of one, caused by mutations in the gene encoding the gap junction protein connexin26, which accounts for between one third to one half of the cases of prelingual inherited deafness in Caucasian populations.
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