Back to Search Start Over

Spectrum of genes for inherited hearing loss in the Israeli Jewish population, including the novel human deafness gene<scp>ATOH1</scp>

Authors :
Tom Walsh
Silvia Casadei
Ofer Isakov
Mary Claire King
Matthew W. Kelley
Noa Ruhrman-Shahar
Eiríkur Steingrímsson
Maria Birkan
Mor Bordeynik-Cohen
Ronna Hertzano
Nadra Samra
Morad Khayat
Nada Danial-Farran
Naama Zvi
Zippora Brownstein
Moshe Frydman
Elon Pras
Ophir Handzel
Moien Kanaan
Fabio Tadeu Arrojo Martins
Michal Macarov
Noam Shomron
Asgeir O. Arnthorsson
Bella Davidov
Doaa Ali-Naffaa
Michal Sagi
Lara Kamal
Reuven Sharony
Lina Basel-Salmon
Ming K. Lee
Meirav Sokolov
Weise Chang
Ory Madgar
Michael Wolf
Dorit Lev
Karen B. Avraham
Hagit Baris-Feldman
Dror Gilony
Ryan J. Carlson
Hana Poran
Noga Lipschitz
Shahar Taiber
Suleyman Gulsuner
Amal Abu-Rayyan
Stavit Allon-Shalev
Chana Vinkler
Amihood Singer
Amir Peleg
Efrat Sofrin‐Drucker
Mordechai Shohat
Source :
Clin Genet
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Mutations in more than 150 genes are responsible for inherited hearing loss, with thousands of different, severe causal alleles that vary among populations. The Israeli Jewish population includes communities of diverse geographic origins, revealing a wide range of deafness-associated variants and enabling clinical characterization of the associated phenotypes. Our goal was to identify the genetic causes of inherited hearing loss in this population, and to determine relationships among genotype, phenotype, and ethnicity. Genomic DNA samples from informative relatives of 88 multiplex families, all of self-identified Jewish ancestry, with either non-syndromic or syndromic hearing loss, were sequenced for known and candidate deafness genes using the HEar-Seq gene panel. The genetic causes of hearing loss were identified for 60% of the families. One gene was encountered for the first time in human hearing loss: ATOH1 (Atonal), a basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor responsible for autosomal dominant progressive hearing loss in a five-generation family. Our results demonstrate that genomic sequencing with a gene panel dedicated to hearing loss is effective for genetic diagnoses in a diverse population. Comprehensive sequencing enables well-informed genetic counseling and clinical management by medical geneticists, otolaryngologists, audiologists, and speech therapists and can be integrated into newborn screening for deafness.

Details

ISSN :
13990004 and 00099163
Volume :
98
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a84df7512b560e32da80d89b20de85d7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/cge.13817