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Cochlin / COCH

cochlin

Cochlin / COCH is highly conserved in human, mouse, and chicken, showing 94% and 79% amino acid identity of human to mouse and chicken sequences, respectively. Hybridization to this gene was detected in spindle-shaped cells located along nerve fibers between the auditory ganglion and sensory epithelium. These cells accompany neurites at the habenula perforata, the opening through which neurites extend to innervate hair cells. This and the pattern of expression of this gene in chicken inner ear paralleled the histologic findings of acidophilic deposits, consistent with mucopolysaccharide ground substance, in temporal bones from DFNA9 (autosomal dominant nonsyndromic sensorineural deafness 9) patients. Mutations that cause DFNA9 have been reported in this gene. Alternative splicing results in multiple transcript variants encoding the same protein. Additional splice variants encoding distinct isoforms have been described but their biological validities have not been demonstrated.

Gene Name: cochlin
Synonyms: COCH, COCH5B2, COCH-5B2, Cochlin, DFNA9, DFNA31
Target Sequences: NM_004086 NP_004077.1 O43405

Publications (1)

1
Involvement of cochlin binding to sulfated heparan sulfate/heparin in the pathophysiology of autosomal dominant late-onset hearing loss (DFNA9). Tomoko Honda, Norihito Kawasaki, Rei Yanagihara, Ryo Tamura, Karin Murakami, Tomomi Ichimiya, Naoki Matsumoto, Shoko Nishihara, Kazuo Yamamoto. PloS one. 2022 July;17:e0268485. [Full Text Article] [PubMed:35901072] [PMC:PMC9333281] Related Antibodies: LS-C334796.

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For RESEARCH USE ONLY. Intended for use by laboratory professionals. Not intended for human diagnostic or therapeutic purposes.

The data on this page has been compiled from LifeSpan internal sources, the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI), and The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt).