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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Deafness DFNB128 Associated with a Recessive Variant of HumanRecapitulates Hearing Loss of-Deficient Mice.

Journal:
Genes
Year:
2024
Authors:
Faridi, Rabia et al.
Affiliation:
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD) · United States
Species:
rodent

Abstract

Deafness in vertebrates is associated with variants of hundreds of genes. Yet, many mutant genes causing rare forms of deafness remain to be discovered. A consanguineous Pakistani family segregating nonsyndromic deafness in two sibships were studied using microarrays and exome sequencing. A 1.2 Mb locus (DFNB128) on chromosome 5q11.2 encompassing six genes was identified. In one of the two sibships of this family, a novel homozygous recessive variant NM_005921.2:c.4460G>A p.(Arg1487His) in the kinase domain ofco-segregated with nonsyndromic deafness. There are two previously reported-kinase-deficient mouse models that are associated with recessively inherited syndromic deafness.phosphorylates serine and threonine and functions in a signaling pathway where pathogenic variants of,, andwere previously reported to be associated with human deafness,, and, respectively. Our single-cell transcriptome data of mouse cochlea mRNA show expression ofand its signaling partners in several inner ear cell types suggesting a requirement of wild-typefor normal hearing. In contrast to dominant variants ofassociated with Disorders of Sex Development 46,XY sex-reversal, our computational modeling of the recessive substitution p.(Arg1487His) predicts a subtle structural alteration in, consistent with the limited phenotype of nonsyndromic deafness.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39062623/