| Literature DB >> 33229591 |
Sophie Boucher1,2,3,4, Fabienne Wong Jun Tai1, Sedigheh Delmaghani1, Andrea Lelli1, Amrit Singh-Estivalet1,2, Typhaine Dupont1, Magali Niasme-Grare1,5, Vincent Michel1, Nicolas Wolff6, Amel Bahloul1, Yosra Bouyacoub1, Didier Bouccara7, Bernard Fraysse8, Olivier Deguine8, Lionel Collet9, Hung Thai-Van1,10,11, Eugen Ionescu10, Jean-Louis Kemeny12, Fabrice Giraudet13,14, Jean-Pierre Lavieille15, Arnaud Devèze15, Anne-Laure Roudevitch-Pujol16, Christophe Vincent17, Christian Renard18, Valérie Franco-Vidal19, Claire Thibult-Apt19, Vincent Darrouzet19, Eric Bizaguet20, Arnaud Coez20,21,22, Hugues Aschard23, Nicolas Michalski1, Gaëlle M Lefevre1, Anne Aubois16, Paul Avan1,13,14,24, Crystel Bonnet1,2, Christine Petit25,26.
Abstract
Presbycusis, or age-related hearing loss (ARHL), is a major public health issue. About half the phenotypic variance has been attributed to genetic factors. Here, we assessed the contribution to presbycusis of ultrarare pathogenic variants, considered indicative of Mendelian forms. We focused on severe presbycusis without environmental or comorbidity risk factors and studied multiplex family age-related hearing loss (mARHL) and simplex/sporadic age-related hearing loss (sARHL) cases and controls with normal hearing by whole-exome sequencing. Ultrarare variants (allele frequency [AF] < 0.0001) of 35 genes responsible for autosomal dominant early-onset forms of deafness, predicted to be pathogenic, were detected in 25.7% of mARHL and 22.7% of sARHL cases vs. 7.5% of controls (P = 0.001); half were previously unknown (AF < 0.000002). MYO6, MYO7A, PTPRQ, and TECTA variants were present in 8.9% of ARHL cases but less than 1% of controls. Evidence for a causal role of variants in presbycusis was provided by pathogenicity prediction programs, documented haploinsufficiency, three-dimensional structure/function analyses, cell biology experiments, and reported early effects. We also established Tmc1 N321I/+ mice, carrying the TMC1:p.(Asn327Ile) variant detected in an mARHL case, as a mouse model for a monogenic form of presbycusis. Deafness gene variants can thus result in a continuum of auditory phenotypes. Our findings demonstrate that the genetics of presbycusis is shaped by not only well-studied polygenic risk factors of small effect size revealed by common variants but also, ultrarare variants likely resulting in monogenic forms, thereby paving the way for treatment with emerging inner ear gene therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Tmc1; age-related hearing loss; monogenic disorder; presbycusis; ultrarare variants
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33229591 PMCID: PMC7733833 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2010782117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205