Abstract

The genetic heterogeneity of sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is a major hurdle to the detection of disease-causing variants. We aimed to identify underlying causal genes associated with mid-frequency hearing loss (HL), which contributes to less than about 1% of SNHL cases, by whole exome sequencing (WES). Thirty families segregating mid-frequency SNHL, in whom biallelic GJB2 mutations had been previously excluded, were selected from among 851 families in our DNA repository of SNHL. DNA samples from the probands were subjected to WES analysis and searched for candidate variants associated with SNHL. We were able to identify the genetic aetiology in six probands (20%). In total, we found three pathogenic and three likely pathogenic variants in four genes (COL4A5, OTOGL, TECTA, TMPRSS3). One more proband was a compound heterozygote for a pathogenic variant and a variant of uncertain significance (VUS) in MYO15A gene. To date, MYO15A and TMPRSS3 have not yet been described in association with mid-frequency SNHL. In eight additional probands, eight candidate VUS variants were detected in five genes (DIAPH1, MYO7A, TECTA, TMC1, TSPEAR). Seven of these 16 variants have not yet been published or mentioned in the available databases. The most prevalent gene was TECTA, identified in 23% of all tested families. Furthermore, we confirmed the hypothesis that a substantive portion of cases with this conspicuous audiogram shape is a consequence of a genetic disorder.

Highlights

  • The genetic heterogeneity of sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is a major hurdle to the detection of disease-causing variants

  • We established the genetic aetiology of HL in six families (20%) and we assumed the cause of HL based on the detected candidate variant of uncertain significance (VUS) variants in an additional eight families (27%)

  • We identified a pathogenic and VUS variant in the MYO15A gene (NM_016239.4) in family FAM837, which was characterized with early-onset HL

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The genetic heterogeneity of sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is a major hurdle to the detection of disease-causing variants. We aimed to identify underlying causal genes associated with mid-frequency hearing loss (HL), which contributes to less than about 1% of SNHL cases, by whole exome sequencing (WES). Eight candidate VUS variants were detected in five genes (DIAPH1, MYO7A, TECTA,TMC1, TSPEAR). Pure tone audiometry (0.25–8 kHz) is the gold standard for measuring hearing in older children and a­ dults[4] It allows determination of the degree of hearing impairment, assigns it to a specific type of audiometric curve and enables characterization of the distinct shapes of this curve (basocochlear, mediocochlear, pancochlear, apicocochlear, ski slope, etc.). The aim of our study was to identify causative gene variants associated with mid-frequency hearing loss

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call