Abstract

BackgroundBranchio-oto-renal (BOR) syndrome is a dominant autosomal disorder characterized by phenotypes such as hearing loss, branchial fistulae, preauricular pits, and renal abnormalities. EYA1, the human homolog of the Drosophila “eye absent” gene on chromosome 8q13.3, is recognized as one of the most important genes associated with BOR syndrome.MethodsThe proposita in this study was a 5-year-old Chinese girl with hearing loss, bilateral otitis media with effusion, microtia, facial hypoplasia, palatoschisis, and bilateral branchial cleft fistulae. The girl’s family members, except two who were deceased, agreed to undergo clinical examination. We collected blood samples from 10 family members, including six who were affected by the syndrome. Genomic DNA was extracted and subjected to Sanger sequencing. A minigene assay was performed to confirm whether splicing signals were altered. In addition, we performed western blotting to determine alterations in protein levels of the wild-type and mutant gene.ResultsClinical tests showed that some of the family members met the criteria for BOR syndrome. The affected members harbored a novel heterozygous nonsense variation in exon 11 of EYA1, whereas no unaffected member carried the mutation at this position. Functional experiments did not detect abnormal splicing at the RNA level; however, western blotting showed that the mutated protein was truncated.ConclusionsThis study reports a novel mutation associated with BOR syndrome in a Chinese family. We highlight the usefulness of genetic testing in the diagnosis of BOR syndrome. Thus, we believe that this report would benefit clinicians in this field.

Highlights

  • Branchio-oto-renal (BOR) syndrome is a dominant autosomal disorder characterized by phenotypes such as hearing loss, branchial fistulae, preauricular pits, and renal abnormalities

  • Some cases of kidney abnormalities are detected at infancy, whereas others are detected in adulthood, which delays the appropriate time for therapeutic intervention

  • II:2 and her children (III):1 presented with bilateral branchial cleft fistulae and microtia (Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Branchio-oto-renal (BOR) syndrome is a dominant autosomal disorder characterized by phenotypes such as hearing loss, branchial fistulae, preauricular pits, and renal abnormalities. Branchio-oto-renal (BOR) syndrome (OMIM113650) is a hereditary dominant autosomal disease with a variable spectrum of manifestations [1]. BOR syndrome and ear and branchial defects can be identified in early childhood, whereas more time is required for identifying kidney defects [5, 6]. Some cases of kidney abnormalities are detected at infancy, whereas others are detected in adulthood, which delays the appropriate time for therapeutic intervention. This indicates that more attention should be paid to the diagnosis of BOR syndrome as early as possible

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