| Literature DB >> 32860223 |
Dana Safka Brozkova1, Simona Poisson Marková1, Anna Uhrová Mészárosová1, Ján Jenčík1, Vlasta Čejnová2, Zdeněk Čada3, Jana Laštůvková2, Dagmar Rašková4, Pavel Seeman1.
Abstract
Non-syndromic autosomal recessive hearing loss is an extremely heterogeneous disease caused by mutations in more than 80 genes. We examined Czech patients with early/prelingual non-syndromic, presumably genetic hearing loss (NSHL) without known cause after GJB2 gene testing. Four hundred and twenty-one unrelated patients were examined for STRC gene deletions with quantitative comparative fluorescent PCR (QCF PCR), 197 unrelated patients with next-generation sequencing by custom-designed NSHL gene panels and 19 patients with whole-exome sequencing (WES). Combining all methods, we discovered the cause of the disease in 54 patients. The most frequent type of NSHL was DFNB16 (STRC), which was detected in 22 patients, almost half of the clarified patients. Other biallelic pathogenic mutations were detected in the genes: MYO15A, LOXHD1, TMPRSS3 (each gene was responsible for five clarified patients, CDH23 (four clarified patients), OTOG and OTOF (each gene was responsible for two clarified patients). Other genes (AIFM1, CABP2, DIAPH1, PTPRQ, RDX, SLC26A4, TBC1D24, TECTA, TMC1) that explained the cause of hearing impairment were further detected in only one patient for each gene. STRC gene mutations, mainly deletions remain the most frequent NSHL cause after mutations in the GJB2.Entities:
Keywords: hearing loss; next-generation sequencing; non GJB2 patients; non-syndromic hearing loss
Year: 2020 PMID: 32860223 DOI: 10.1111/cge.13839
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Genet ISSN: 0009-9163 Impact factor: 4.438