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TMTC4 is a hair cell–specific human deafness gene
Jiang Li, Byung Yoon Choi, Yasmin Eltawil, Noura Ismail Mohamad, Yesai Park, Ian R. Matthews, Jin Hee Han, Bong Jik Kim, Elliott H. Sherr, Dylan K. Chan
Jiang Li, Byung Yoon Choi, Yasmin Eltawil, Noura Ismail Mohamad, Yesai Park, Ian R. Matthews, Jin Hee Han, Bong Jik Kim, Elliott H. Sherr, Dylan K. Chan
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Research Article Otology

TMTC4 is a hair cell–specific human deafness gene

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Abstract

Transmembrane and tetratricopeptide repeat 4 (Tmtc4) is a deafness gene in mice. Tmtc4-KO mice have rapidly progressive postnatal hearing loss due to overactivation of the unfolded protein response (UPR); however, the cellular basis and human relevance of Tmtc4-associated hearing loss in the cochlea was not heretofore appreciated. We created a hair cell–specific conditional KO mouse that phenocopies the constitutive KO with postnatal onset deafness, demonstrating that Tmtc4 is a hair cell–specific deafness gene. Furthermore, we identified a human family in which Tmtc4 variants segregate with adult-onset progressive hearing loss. Lymphoblastoid cells derived from multiple affected and unaffected family members, as well as human embryonic kidney cells engineered to harbor each of the variants, demonstrated that the human Tmtc4 variants confer hypersensitivity of the UPR toward apoptosis. These findings provide evidence that TMTC4 is a deafness gene in humans and further implicate the UPR in progressive hearing loss.

Authors

Jiang Li, Byung Yoon Choi, Yasmin Eltawil, Noura Ismail Mohamad, Yesai Park, Ian R. Matthews, Jin Hee Han, Bong Jik Kim, Elliott H. Sherr, Dylan K. Chan

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Figure 1

Floxed Tmtc4 transgenic mouse (Tmtc4fl/fl).

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Floxed Tmtc4 transgenic mouse (Tmtc4fl/fl).
(A) LoxP sequences were inse...
(A) LoxP sequences were inserted in the introns up- and downstream of Tmtc4 exon 3 and confirmed by Sanger sequencing. (B) Tmtc4 expression is significantly decreased in the brain and cochlea of Rosa26CreER/Tmtc4fl/fl mice as compared with Cre–/Tmtc4fl/fl mice. ***P < 0.001, ****P < 0.0001 by 1-way ANOVA.

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