Protein linked to hearing loss in elderly identified
November 11th, 2009 - 4:46 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Nov 11 (ANI): Scientists from University of Florida and University of Wisconsin have identified a protein that plays a critical role in development of age-related hearing loss.
The protein called Bak appears to be central to processes that cause oxidative damage to cells and lead to hearing loss.
The new findings will help point the way toward a new target for antioxidant therapies.
“Within the mitochondria these proteins cause life, but when they’re out they’re deadly,” said professor Christiaan Leeuwenburgh, Ph.D., chief of the biology of aging division at UF’s College of Medicine and a member of the Institute on Aging.
One theory of aging holds that free radicals damage components of mitochondria, the energy centre of cells. Such damage accumulates over time, leading to a destabilization of the mitochondria, which leads to release of certain proteins.
The cell death triggered by the escaped proteins lead to physical effects we associate with aging, such as hearing loss.
Bak is known to play a role in the weakening of the mitochondrial membrane. The more of the protein present, the leakier the mitochondrial membrane becomes, allowing harmful proteins to travel out into the rest of the cell.
During the study, researchers analysed whether absence of Bak would prevent the age-related hearing loss that is associated with the death of certain sensory hair, nerve and membrane cells in the inner ear.
Hearing tests showed that Bak-deficient middle-aged mice were found to have hearing levels comparable to that of young mice.
In addition, fewer of the critical hearing cells died, compared with so-called wild type mice that did not have the protein deficiency.
The study is published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)
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