Abstract

BackgroundThe genetic basis of autosomal dominant nonsyndromic hearing loss is complex. Genetic factors are responsible for approximately 50% of cases with congenital hearing loss. However, no previous studies have documented the clinical phenotype and genetic basis of autosomal dominant nonsyndromic hearing loss in Mongolians.MethodsIn this study, we performed exon capture sequencing of a Mongolian family with hereditary hearing loss and identified a novel mutation in TECTA gene, which encodes α -tectorin, a major component of the inner ear extracellular matrix that contacts the specialized sensory hair cells.ResultsThe novel G → T missense mutation at nucleotide 6016 results in a substitution of amino acid aspartate at 2006 with tyrosine (Asp2006Tyr) in a highly conserved zona pellucida (ZP) domain of α-tectorin. The mutation is not found in control subjects from the same family with normal hearing and a genotype-phenotype correlation is observed.ConclusionA novel missense mutation c.6016 G > T (p.Asp2006Tyr) of TECTA gene is a characteristic TECTA-related mutation which causes autosomal dominant nonsyndromic hearing loss. Our result indicated that mutation in TECTA gene is responsible for the hearing loss in this Mongolian family.

Highlights

  • The genetic basis of autosomal dominant nonsyndromic hearing loss is complex

  • We examined the genetic basis of ADSHNL in a Mongolian family with hereditary hearing loss by exon-capture sequencing of known genes associated with hearing loss and identified a novel mutation in TECTA gene

  • We further studied the genotypephenotype correlation of mutation in TECTA gene with control subjects from the same family with normal hearing and confirmed that mutation in TECTA gene is responsible for the hearing loss in this Mongolian family

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Summary

Introduction

The genetic basis of autosomal dominant nonsyndromic hearing loss is complex. No previous studies have documented the clinical phenotype and genetic basis of autosomal dominant nonsyndromic hearing loss in Mongolians. Hearing loss is one of the most common sensory disorders in humans. Genetic factors are responsible for approximately 50% of cases with congenital hearing loss [1,2]. While 30% of hereditary hearing loss are syndromic associated with specific signs and medical problems, the other 70% are nonsyndromic [3]. The heredity of nonsyndromic hearing loss has recessive and dominant modes of inheritance. It is estimated that 80% of genetic forms of hearing loss is autosomal recessive and the remaining 20% is autosomal dominant [2].

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