Abstract

Variants in the EYA4 gene are known to lead to autosomal dominant non-syndromic hereditary hearing loss, DFNA10. To date, 30 variants have been shown to be responsible for hearing loss in a diverse set of nationalities. To better understand the clinical characteristics and prevalence of DFNA10, we performed genetic screening for EYA4 mutations in a large cohort of Japanese hearing loss patients. We selected 1,336 autosomal dominant hearing loss patients among 7,408 unrelated Japanese hearing loss probands and performed targeted genome enrichment and massively parallel sequencing of 68 target genes for all patients. Clinical information of cases with mutations in EYA4 was gathered and analyzed from medical charts. Eleven novel EYA4 variants (three frameshift variants, three missense variants, two nonsense variants, one splicing variant, and two single-copy number losses) and two previously reported variants were found in 12 probands (0.90%) among the 1,336 autosomal dominant hearing loss families. The audiometric configuration of truncating variants tends to deteriorate for all frequencies, whereas that of non-truncating variants tends to show high-frequency hearing loss, suggesting a new correlation between genotype and phenotype in DFNA10. The rate of hearing loss progression caused by EYA4 variants was considered to be 0.63 dB/year, as found in this study and previous reports.

Highlights

  • Variants in the EYA4 gene are known to lead to autosomal dominant non-syndromic hereditary hearing loss, DFNA10

  • 30 variants in the EYA4 gene and a partial or whole deletion of the EYA4 allele have been reported as a cause of Autosomal dominant non-syndromic hearing loss (ADNSHL) in various ethnic groups, including the American, Belgian, Dutch, Korean, Chinese, Swedish, German, Australian, Hungarian, Philippine, Italian, and Japanese populations[4,5,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31]

  • Among the 1,336 probands with ADNSHL, we identified 12 (0.90%) who carried a possible EYA4 pathogenic variant (Table 1, Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Variants in the EYA4 gene are known to lead to autosomal dominant non-syndromic hereditary hearing loss, DFNA10. 30 variants in the EYA4 gene and a partial or whole deletion of the EYA4 allele have been reported as a cause of ADNSHL in various ethnic groups, including the American, Belgian, Dutch, Korean, Chinese, Swedish, German, Australian, Hungarian, Philippine, Italian, and Japanese populations[4,5,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31] These previous studies have described the clinical phenotypes of patients with EYA4 variants; the detailed characteristics of the hearing loss, such as its progressiveness or severity, remain unclear. The genotype-phenotype correlation is yet to be clarified

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