1. A comparative analysis of genetic hearing loss phenotypes in European/American and Japanese populations
- Author
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Terry A. Braun, Guy P. Richardson, Carla Nishimura, A. Monique Weaver, Shin-ichi Usami, Shin-ya Nishio, Hela Azaiez, Yoichiro Iwasa, Amanda M. Schaefer, Robert J. Marini, Kathy L. Frees, Hidekane Yoshimura, Thomas L. Casavant, Hideaki Moteki, Peter G. Barr-Gillespie, Diana L. Kolbe, Taylor R. Thomas, W. Daniel Walls, Kai Wang, Richard J.H. Smith, and Kevin T. Booth
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Genotype ,Hearing loss ,Hearing Loss, Sensorineural ,Ethnic group ,Gene Expression ,Biology ,GPI-Linked Proteins ,White People ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Asian People ,Audiometry ,Japan ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,TECTA ,Child ,Genetics (clinical) ,Genetic Association Studies ,030304 developmental biology ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,0303 health sciences ,Extracellular Matrix Proteins ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,KCNQ Potassium Channels ,030305 genetics & heredity ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Membrane Proteins ,Middle Aged ,Human genetics ,United States ,Pedigree ,Phenotype ,Evolutionary biology ,Case-Control Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Mutation (genetic algorithm) ,Mutation ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,KCNQ4 - Abstract
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.
- Published
- 2019