Trafficking abnormality and ER stress underlie functional deficiency of hearing impairmentassociated connexin-31 mutants

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Abstract

Hearing impairment (HI) affects 1/1000 children and over 2% of the aged population. We have previously reported that mutations in the gene encoding gap junction protein connexin-31 (C×31) are associated with HI. The pathological mechanism of the disease mutations remains unknown. Here, we show that expression of C×31 in the mouse inner ear is developmentally regulated with a high level in adult inner hair cells and spiral ganglion neurons that are critical for the hearing process. In transfected cells, wild type C×31 protein (C×31wt) forms functional gap junction at cell-cell-contacts. In contrast, two HIassociated C×31 mutants, C×31R180X and C×31E183K resided primarily in the ER and Golgi-like intracellular punctate structures, respectively, and failed to mediate lucifer yellow transfer. Expression of C×31 mutants but not C×31wt leads to upregulation of and increased association with the ER chaperone BiP indicating ER stress induction. Together, the HI-associated C×31 mutants are impaired in trafficking, promote ER stress, and hence lose the ability to assemble functional gap junctions. The study reveals a potential pathological mechanism of HI-associated C×31 mutations. © 2010 Higher Education Press and Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

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Xia, K., Ma, H., Xiong, H., Pan, Q., Huang, L., Wang, D., & Zhang, Z. (2010). Trafficking abnormality and ER stress underlie functional deficiency of hearing impairmentassociated connexin-31 mutants. Protein and Cell, 1(10), 935–943. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13238-010-0118-7

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