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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Targeted next-generation sequencing of deafness genes in hearing-impaired individuals uncovers informative mutations
Anne K LäßigOliver BartschFabian KrausJ. SchröderBarbara VonaTobias MüllerThomas HaafSebastian P. SchravenCordula NeunerWafaa Shehata-dielerAnnerose KeilmannMichaela A.h. HofrichterIndrajit Nandasubject
MaleProbandUsher syndromeGene DosageDeafnessBioinformaticsmedicine.disease_causesensorineural hearing lossConnexinsCohort Studiestargeted next-generation sequencingOriginal Research Articlemutational loadChildGenetics (clinical)Oligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysisGeneticsMutationmedicine.diagnostic_testHomozygoteHigh-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingPedigreeConnexin 26Treatment OutcomeChild PreschoolFemalemedicine.symptomAdultAdolescentSequence analysisHearing lossdeafness gene panelMolecular Sequence DataBiologynonsyndromic hearing lossDNA sequencingYoung AdultAudiometryGenetic variationotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineHumansGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseFamily HealthBase SequenceGenetic VariationInfantDNASequence Analysis DNAmedicine.diseaseMutationAudiometryGene Deletiondescription
Purpose: Targeted next-generation sequencing provides a remarkable opportunity to identify variants in known disease genes, particularly in extremely heterogeneous disorders such as nonsyndromic hearing loss. The present study attempts to shed light on the complexity of hearing impairment. Methods: Using one of two next-generation sequencing panels containing either 80 or 129 deafness genes, we screened 30 individuals with nonsyndromic hearing loss (from 23 unrelated families) and analyzed 9 normal-hearing controls. Results: Overall, we found an average of 3.7 variants (in 80 genes) with deleterious prediction outcome, including a number of novel variants, in individuals with nonsyndromic hearing loss and 1.4 in controls. By next-generation sequencing alone, 12 of 23 (52%) probands were diagnosed with monogenic forms of nonsyndromic hearing loss; one individual displayed a DNA sequence mutation together with a microdeletion. Two (9%) probands have Usher syndrome. In the undiagnosed individuals (10/23; 43%) we detected a significant enrichment of potentially pathogenic variants as compared to controls. Conclusion: Next-generation sequencing combined with microarrays provides the diagnosis for approximately half of the GJB2 mutation–negative individuals. Usher syndrome was found to be more frequent in the study cohort than anticipated. The conditions in a proportion of individuals with nonsyndromic hearing loss, particularly in the undiagnosed group, may have been caused or modified by an accumulation of unfavorable variants across multiple genes.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-05-01 | Genetics in Medicine |