Abstract
Prof. Christine Petit
The
molecular mechanisms underlying the development and functioning of the auditory
system remained virtually unknown until genetic dissection emerged as a means of
accessing them. In this lecture, I will show why and how the genes responsible
for deafness in humans made it possible to bring the auditory system into the
molecular era. I will focus, in particular, on the biology of the auditory
sensory cells. I will show how the molecular mechanisms underlying the
essential functions and properties of these cells —auditory sensory
transduction, the generation of sound distortions and the temporal precision of
their activity — were elucidated and how the role of previously neglected
structures was discovered. Our recent results, notably, demonstrate that some
of these forms of deafness are not exclusively peripheral in origin, indicating
that the proteins encoded by some deafness genes are also involved in auditory
cortex development. In parallel, this work has also shed light on the
pathogenesis of a very large number of forms of deafness, most of which are hereditary.
Based on these data, active research with the aim of curing hearing impairment
is currently underway. We will look at the preliminary results obtained in
animals and the challenges that lie ahead.