A burden shared: The evolutionary case for studying human deafness in Drosophila

IF 2.5 2区 医学 Q1 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY
Chonglin Guan , Muhammad Shaikh , Athanasia Warnecke , Barbara Vona , Joerg T Albert
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Abstract

Hearing impairment is the most prevalent sensory disease in humans and can have dramatic effects on the development, and preservation, of our cognitive abilities and social interactions. Currently 20 % of the world's population suffer from a form of hearing impairment; this is predicted to rise to 25 % by 2050. Despite this staggering disease load, and the vast damage it inflicts on the social, medical and economic fabric of humankind, our ability to predict, or prevent, the loss of hearing is very poor indeed. We here make the case for a paradigm shift in our approach to studying deafness. By exploiting more forcefully the molecular-genetic conservation between human hearing and hearing in morphologically distinct models, such as the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, we believe, a deeper understanding of hearing and deafness can be achieved. An understanding that moves beyond the surface of the ‘deafness genes’ to probe the underlying bedrock of hearing, which is shared across taxa, and partly shared across modalities. When it comes to understanding the workings (and failings) of human sensory function, a simple fruit fly has a lot to offer and a fly eye might sometimes be a powerful model for a human ear. Particularly the use of fly avatars, in which specific molecular (genetic or proteomic) states of humans (e.g. specific patients) are experimentally reproduced, in order to study the corresponding molecular mechanisms (e.g. specific diseases) in a controlled yet naturalistic environment, is a tool that promises multiple unprecedented insights. The use of the fly – and fly avatars – would benefit humans and will help enhance the power of other scientific models, such as the mouse.

共同的负担:用果蝇研究人类耳聋的进化案例
听力障碍是人类最普遍的感官疾病,会对我们认知能力和社会交往能力的发展和保持产生巨大影响。目前,全球有 20% 的人口患有某种形式的听力障碍;预计到 2050 年,这一比例将上升到 25%。尽管听力障碍给人类的社会、医疗和经济造成了巨大的损失,但我们预测或预防听力损失的能力却非常薄弱。在此,我们提出转变耳聋研究方法的理由。我们相信,通过更有力地利用人类听力与黑腹果蝇等形态各异的模型听力之间的分子遗传保护关系,我们可以更深入地了解听力和耳聋。这种理解将超越 "耳聋基因 "的表层,探究听力的深层基石。在了解人类感官功能的运作(和缺陷)方面,简单的果蝇可以提供很多帮助,有时蝇眼可能是人类耳朵的有力模型。特别是利用蝇类化身,通过实验再现人类(如特定病人)的特定分子(基因或蛋白质组)状态,以便在受控但自然的环境中研究相应的分子机制(如特定疾病),这种工具有望带来多种前所未有的见解。苍蝇--以及苍蝇化身--的使用将造福人类,并有助于增强小鼠等其他科学模型的力量。
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来源期刊
Hearing Research
Hearing Research 医学-耳鼻喉科学
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
14.30%
发文量
163
审稿时长
75 days
期刊介绍: The aim of the journal is to provide a forum for papers concerned with basic peripheral and central auditory mechanisms. Emphasis is on experimental and clinical studies, but theoretical and methodological papers will also be considered. The journal publishes original research papers, review and mini- review articles, rapid communications, method/protocol and perspective articles. Papers submitted should deal with auditory anatomy, physiology, psychophysics, imaging, modeling and behavioural studies in animals and humans, as well as hearing aids and cochlear implants. Papers dealing with the vestibular system are also considered for publication. Papers on comparative aspects of hearing and on effects of drugs and environmental contaminants on hearing function will also be considered. Clinical papers will be accepted when they contribute to the understanding of normal and pathological hearing functions.
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