Abstract
Hereditary hearing loss (HL) is a common sensory disorder, with an incidence of 1–2 per 1000 newborns, and has a genetic etiology in over 50% of cases. It occurs either as part of a syndrome or in isolation and is genetically very heterogeneous which poses a challenge for clinical and molecular diagnosis. We used exome sequencing to seek a genetic cause in a group of 56 subjects (49 probands) with HL: 32 with non-syndromic non-GJB2 HL and 17 with syndromic HL. Following clinical examination and clinical exome sequencing, an etiological diagnosis was established in 15 probands (15/49; 30%); eight (8/17;47%) from the syndromic group and seven (7/32; 21%) from the non-syndromic non-GJB2 subgroup. Fourteen different (half of them novel) non-GJB2 variants causing HL were found in 10 genes (CHD7, HDAC8, MITF, NEFL, OTOF, SF3B4, SLC26A4, TECTA, TMPRSS3, USH2A) among 13 probands, confirming the genetic heterogeneity of hereditary HL. Different genetic causes for HL were found in a single family while three probands with apparent syndromic HL were found to have HL as a separate clinical feature, distinct from the complex phenotype. Clinical exome sequencing proved to be an effective tool used to comprehensively address the genetic heterogeneity of HL, to detect clinically unrecognized HL syndromes, and to decipher complex phenotypes in which HL is a separate feature and not part of a syndrome.
Highlights
Hereditary hearing loss (HL) is one of the most common sensory disorders worldwide, with an incidence of 1–2 per 1000 newborns [1]
We identified a single variant in 13 genes (CHD7, HDAC8, MIR96, MITF, MYH14, NEFL, RYR1, SF3B4 TECTA, TMC1, TMPRSS3, USH2A, and WFS1), two variants in OTOF and five variants in SLC26A4 (Table 2)
Exome sequencing in patients with syndromic or non-syndromic hearing loss proband’s clinical features were consistent with the clinical diagnosis of Cornelia de Lange syndrome, a clinical and genetically heterogeneous disorder, caused by heterozygous pathogenic variants in HDAC8 among others [29], [30]
Summary
Hereditary hearing loss (HL) is one of the most common sensory disorders worldwide, with an incidence of 1–2 per 1000 newborns [1]. In 2004 the World Health Organization reported that over 5% of the world population 360 million people) had a disabling hearing impediment greater than 40 decibels (measured average for 0.5, 1, 2, 4 kHz (dB)) [2]. Exome sequencing in patients with syndromic or non-syndromic hearing loss www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/clinvar/variation/373979/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/clinvar/variation/ 373978/
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