DJ_KiDDvIcIOUs
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Promising Study Shows the Power of Gene Therapy to Treat Deafness
http://io9.com/promising-study-shows-the-power-of-gene-therapy-to-trea-1716750367
Pretty awesome stuff. I hope they are able to perfect this before all my loud music causes me to go completely deaf

An international team of researchers has used a virus to correct genetic defects and partially restore hearing in deaf mice. Its an important proof-of-concept that could eventually lead to therapies in humans.
Genetic faults are responsible for approximately half of all cases of hearing loss in early life, and there are at least 70 genes that, when mutated, cause deafness. Its no wonder, then, that scientists would like to use gene therapies to treatand even possibly cur certain forms of hearing impairments. Now, a research team led by Jeffrey Holt from the F. M. Kirby Neurobiology Center at Boston Childrens Hospital, along with Charles Askew and colleagues at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in Switzerland, has shown that this may indeed be the right approach.
By focusing on a gene called TMC1a gene that accounts for 4-to-8% of genetic deafnessthe researchers have demonstrated that its possible to use a virus, in this case the adeno-associated virus 1 (AAV1), to deliver a functional version of TMC1 and restore partial hearing in mice. TMC1 is critical in that it encodes a protein that converts sound into electrical signals that travel to the brain. The results of their work now appears at Science Translational Medicine.
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Writing in Science News, Sarah Schwartz explains more:
The scientists tried this therapy on two different deafness-causing mutations. Within a month, around half the mice with one mutation showed brainwave activity consistent with hearing and jumped when exposed to loud noises. Treated mice with the other mutation didnt respond to noises, but the gene therapy helped their hair cells which normally die off quickly due to the mutation survive. All of the untreated mice remained deaf.
The mice that recovered hearing received a partial fix. Most of their inner hair cells, which allow basic hearing, used the new genes. But few outer hair cells, which amplify noises, accepted the viral delivery. Its hard to get outer hair cells to respond to gene therapy...Still, inner hair cells control most sound transmission...
Eventually, the scientists would like to use viruses to treat all hair cells and achieve complete recovery of hearing. The next step is to improve the viral infection rate and to see if they can get these treatments to last longer.
Our gene therapy protocol is not yet ready for clinical trialswe need to tweak it a bit morebut in the not-too-distant future we think it could be developed for therapeutic use in humans, noted Holt in a statement.
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Excitingly, AAV1 is considered safe as a viral vector and has already been used in human gene therapy trials to treat blindness, heart disease, muscular dystrophy, and other conditions.
This is a great example of how the basic science can lead to clinical therapies, says Holt.
http://io9.com/promising-study-shows-the-power-of-gene-therapy-to-trea-1716750367
Pretty awesome stuff. I hope they are able to perfect this before all my loud music causes me to go completely deaf