Scientists find key protein helps people hear
LONDON (Reuters) - A protein in the inner ear helps
people differentiate between sounds and understand
speech, French researchers reported on Wednesday in a
finding that could help treat the hard of hearing.
The study also helps explain why some people have
difficulty hearing in crowded restaurants or other noisy
places, said Paul Avan, a researcher at the University of
Auvergne in Clermont-Ferrand, France.
"This won't help cure deafness but will help diagnose why
some people have hearing problems, especially in noisy
places," Avan, who worked on the study, said in a
telephone interview.
The study, which used genetically engineered mice,
looked at the part of the inner ear called the cochlea,
which contains two types of sensory cells to detect
sounds.
Scientists often study mice because of the biological
similarities between the animals and humans.
Until now people had thought that structures called ion
channels found in the cells -- which work like a
microphone to transform sound into electrical messages
to the brain -- were mainly responsible for distorting sound
in the inner ear.
Distortion is important because it allows people to pick out
the correct sounds from a mixture of noises whether it be
competing conversations at a cocktail party or other kinds
of background noise, Avan said.
But the researchers showed how a protein called
stereocilin -- not the ion channels -- was keeping sensory
cells intact and allowing the inner ear to properly distort
sounds, Avan said.
Mice without stereocilin did not hear properly even when
their ion channels worked, Avan and colleagues reported
in the journal Nature.
The findings could help doctors diagnose more subtle
hearing problems and fit certain people with special
hearing aids that eliminate noise coming from certain
directions, Avan said.
"Until now it was thought that if the ion channels worked
everything would be okay," Avan said. "We show that this
is not the case. Sensitivity will be good but that does
nothing if you don't understand anything if it is noisy
around you."
(Reporting by Michael Kahn; Editing by Maggie Fox and Opheera McDoom)
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