Cells (May 2020)

The Functional Role of CONNEXIN 26 Mutation in Nonsyndromic Hearing Loss, Demonstrated by Zebrafish Connexin 30.3 Homologue Model

  • Hsuan-An Su,
  • Ting-Wei Lai,
  • Shuan-Yow Li,
  • Tzu-Rong Su,
  • Jiann-Jou Yang,
  • Ching-Chyuan Su

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells9051291
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 5
p. 1291

Abstract

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Nonsyndromic hearing loss (NSHL) is of great clinical importance, and mutations in the GJB2 gene and the encoded human CONNEXIN 26 (CX26) protein play important roles in the genetic pathogenesis. The CX26 p.R184Q mutation was shown to be a dominant-negative effect in our previous study. Previously, we also demonstrated that zebrafish Cx30.3 is orthologous to human CX26. In the present study, we established transgenic zebrafish models with mutated Cx30.3 specifically expressed in the supporting cells of zebrafish inner ears driven by the agr2 promoter, to demonstrate and understand the mechanism by which the human CX26 R.184 mutation causes NSHL. Our results indicated that significant structural changes in the inner ears of transgenic lines with mutations were measured and compared to wild-type zebrafish. Simultaneously, significant alterations of transgenic lines with mutations in swimming behavior were analyzed with the zebrafish behavioral assay. This is the first study to investigate the functional results of the CX26 p.R184Q mutation with in vivo disease models. Our work supports and confirms the pathogenic role of the CX26 p.R184Q mutation in NSHL, with a hypothesized mechanism of altered interaction among amino acids in the connexins.

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