A comparative analysis of genetic hearing loss phenotypes in European/American and Japanese populations

We present detailed comparative analyses to assess population-level differences in patterns of genetic deafness between European/American and Japanese cohorts with non-syndromic hearing loss. One thousand eighty-three audiometric test results (921 European/American and 162 Japanese) from members of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human genetics 2020-10, Vol.139 (10), p.1315-1323
Hauptverfasser: Walls, W. Daniel, Moteki, Hideaki, Thomas, Taylor R., Nishio, Shin-ya, Yoshimura, Hidekane, Iwasa, Yoichiro, Frees, Kathy L., Nishimura, Carla J., Azaiez, Hela, Booth, Kevin T., Marini, Robert J., Kolbe, Diana L., Weaver, A. Monique, Schaefer, Amanda M., Wang, Kai, Braun, Terry A., Usami, Shin-ichi, Barr-Gillespie, Peter G., Richardson, Guy P., Smith, Richard J., Casavant, Thomas L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We present detailed comparative analyses to assess population-level differences in patterns of genetic deafness between European/American and Japanese cohorts with non-syndromic hearing loss. One thousand eighty-three audiometric test results (921 European/American and 162 Japanese) from members of 168 families (48 European/American and 120 Japanese) with non-syndromic hearing loss secondary to pathogenic variants in one of three genes ( KCNQ4 , TECTA , WFS1 ) were studied. Audioprofile characteristics, specific mutation types, and protein domains were considered in the comparative analyses. Our findings support differences in audioprofiles driven by both mutation type (non-truncating vs. truncating) and ethnic background. The former finding confirms data that ascribe a phenotypic consequence to different mutation types in KCNQ4 ; the latter finding suggests that there are ethnic-specific effects (genetic and/or environmental) that impact gene-specific audioprofiles for TECTA and WFS1 . Identifying the drivers of ethnic differences will refine our understanding of phenotype–genotype relationships and the biology of hearing and deafness.
ISSN:0340-6717
1432-1203
DOI:10.1007/s00439-020-02174-y