| Literature DB >> 25885414 |
Ivica Mašindová1, Andrea Šoltýsová2, Lukáš Varga3, Petra Mátyás4, Andrej Ficek5, Miloslava Hučková6, Martina Sůrová1, Dana Šafka-Brožková7, Saima Anwar8, Judit Bene9, Slavomír Straka10, Ingrid Janicsek4, Zubair M Ahmed8, Pavel Seeman7, Béla Melegh9, Milan Profant11, Iwar Klimeš1, Saima Riazuddin8, Ľudevít Kádasi2, Daniela Gašperíková6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the present study we aimed: 1) To establish the prevalence and clinical impact of DFNB49 mutations in deaf Roma from 2 Central European countries (Slovakia and Hungary), and 2) to analyze a possible common origin of the c.1331+2T>C mutation among Roma and Pakistani mutation carriers identified in the present and previous studies.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25885414 PMCID: PMC4401708 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0124232
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Common ancestral haplotypes of Slovak, Hungarian and Czech Romanies, and Pakistani patients.
The haplotypes in Slovak (SK), Czech (CZ), Hungarian (HU) Roma and Pakistani patients with the c.1331+2T>C mutation, and haplotypes in Slovak Roma controls without the c.1331+2T>C mutation. The c.1331+2T>C mutation is shown in bold. The common haplotype is highlighted in light grey.aThe most similar haplotypes found in 5 out of 56 control individuals. In the remaining 51 control individuals, haplotypes were significantly distinguishable.bThe haplotype in Pakistani patients with c.1183-1G>A mutation.
Fig 2Cosegregation of haplotypes in a Slovak Roma family (SK5) with DFNB49 related deafness caused by the c.1331+2T>C mutation.
The filled symbol represents the proband with hearing impairment; symbols with dot represent normal hearing carriers. Alleles forming the risk haplotype are shown in grey boxes.
Fig 3Hearing thresholds recorded by PTA in Slovak homozygous subjects.
P1, P2, P3, P5, P6—positive probands and P4—a family member. Dashed line represents the calculated mean audiogram.
Fig 4Distribution of the MARVELD2 positive families in Slovakia and Hungary.
Black points on the left hand side of the map represent c.1331+2T>C homozygous probands in the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary. The maps of Slovakia and Hungary on right hand side show proportion rate of the Roma ethnicity at the municipality level [33, 34]. This data is not available for the Czech Republic.