Diana M Cornejo-Sanchez, Thashi Bharadwaj, Rui Dong, Gao T Wang, Isabelle Schrauwen, Andrew T DeWan, Suzanne M Leal
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Age-related (AR) hearing loss (HL) is the most prevalent sensorineural disorder in older adults. Here we demonstrate that rare-variants in well-established Mendelian HL genes play an important role in ARHL etiology. In all we identified 32 Mendelian HL genes which are associated with ARHL. We performed single and rare-variant aggregate association analyses using exome data obtained from white-Europeans with self-reported hearing phenotypes from the UK Biobank. Our analysis revealed previously unreported associations between ARHL and rare-variants in Mendelian non-syndromic and syndromic HL genes, including MYO15A, and WFS1. Additionally, rare-variant aggregate association analyses identified associations with Mendelian HL genes i.e., ACTG1, GRHL2, KCNQ4, MYO7A, PLS1, TMPRSS3, and TNRC6B. Four novel ARHL genes were also detected: FBXO2 and PALM3, implicated in HL in mice, TWF1, associated with HL in Dalmatian dogs, and TXNDC17. In-silico analyses provided further evidence of inner ear expression of these genes in both murine and human models, supporting their relevance to ARHL. Analysis of variants with minor allele frequency >0.005 revealed additional ARHL associations with known e.g., ILDR1 and novel i.e., ABHD12, COA8, KANSL1, SERAC1, and UBE3B Mendelian non-syndromic and syndromic HL genes as well as ARHL associations with genes that have not been previously reported to be involved in HL e.g., VCL. Rare-variants in Mendelian HL genes typically exhibited higher effect sizes for ARHL compared to those in other associated genes. In conclusion, this study highlights the critical role Mendelian non-syndromic and syndromic HL genes play in the etiology of ARHL.
期刊介绍:
The European Journal of Human Genetics is the official journal of the European Society of Human Genetics, publishing high-quality, original research papers, short reports and reviews in the rapidly expanding field of human genetics and genomics. It covers molecular, clinical and cytogenetics, interfacing between advanced biomedical research and the clinician, and bridging the great diversity of facilities, resources and viewpoints in the genetics community.
Key areas include:
-Monogenic and multifactorial disorders
-Development and malformation
-Hereditary cancer
-Medical Genomics
-Gene mapping and functional studies
-Genotype-phenotype correlations
-Genetic variation and genome diversity
-Statistical and computational genetics
-Bioinformatics
-Advances in diagnostics
-Therapy and prevention
-Animal models
-Genetic services
-Community genetics