Abstract

Background and Objective: Hearing loss is the most common sensory deficit in humans. The aim of this study was to clarify the genetic aetiology of nonsyndromic hearing loss in the Moravian-Silesian population of the Czech Republic. Patients and Methods: This study included 200 patients (93 males, 107 females, mean age 16.9 years, ranging from 4 months to 62 years) with nonsyndromic sensorineural hearing loss. We screened all patients for mutations in GJB2 and the large deletion del(GJB6-D13S1830). We performed further screening for additional genes (SERPINB6, TMIE, COCH, ESPN, ACTG1, KCNQ4, and GJB3) with Sanger sequencing on a subset of patients that were negative for GJB2 mutations. Results: We detected biallelic GJB2 mutations in 44 patients (22%). Among these patients, 63.6%, 9.1% and 2.3% exhibited homozygous c.35delG, p.Trp24*, and p.Met34Thr mutations, respectively. The remaining 25% of these patients exhibited compound heterozygous c.35delG, c.-23+1G>A, p.Trp24*, p.Val37Ile, p.Met34Thr, p.Leu90Pro, c.235delC, c.313_326del14, p.Ser139Asn, and p.Gly147Leu mutations. We found a monoallelic GJB2 mutation in 12 patients (6.6%). We found no pathogenic mutations in the other tested genes. Conclusions: One fifth of our cohort had deafness related to GJB2 mutations. The del(GJB6-D13S1830), SERPINB6, TMIE, COCH, ESPN, ACTG1, GJB3, and KCNQ4 mutations were infrequently associated with deafness in the Moravian-Silesian population. Therefore, we suggest that del(GJB6-D13S1830) testing should be performed only when patients with deafness carry the monoallelic GJB2 mutation.

Highlights

  • Sensorineural hearing loss can be caused by genetic or exogenous factors

  • Higher proportions of patients with pedigrees suggestive of autosomal dominant inheritance were found in the late onset groups than in the early prelingual onset group (p = 0.0001 and p = 0.042, respectively) and in the moderate hearing loss group compared to the severe (p = 0.030) and profound

  • We found significantly more biallelic GJB2 mutations in the early prelingual onset group compared to the late childhood onset group (p = 0.001); in the severe hearing loss group compared to the mild (p = 0.004) and moderate (p = 0.046) hearing loss groups; and in the profound hearing loss group compared to the mild hearing loss group (p = 0.0497)

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Summary

Introduction

Sensorineural hearing loss can be caused by genetic or exogenous factors. Seeman et al studied GJB2-related hearing loss in the Czech population [11]. They studied the spectrum and frequencies of GJB2 mutations among 156 unrelated patients with congenital. The aim of this study was to clarify the genetic aetiology of nonsyndromic hearing loss in the Moravian-Silesian population of the Czech Republic. Results: We detected biallelic GJB2 mutations in 44 patients (22%). Among these patients, 63.6%, 9.1% and 2.3% exhibited homozygous c.35delG, p.Trp24*, and p.Met34Thr mutations, respectively. The remaining 25% of these patients exhibited compound heterozygous c.35delG, c.-23+1G>A, p.Trp24*, p.Val37Ile, p.Met34Thr, p.Leu90Pro, c.235delC, c.313_326del, p.Ser139Asn, and p.Gly147Leu mutations.

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