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Background: While auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder (ANSD) is a heterogeneous disorder and its management quite varies depending upon the etiology, even including self-resolution, OTOF is an important molecular etiology of prelingual ANSD and has emerged as an attractive target for implementation of precision medicine in terms of timing and prognosis prediction of auditory rehabilitation. However, to date, the literature is lacking in the genotype-phenotype relationship of this gene as well as efficient molecular testing strategy in the clinic in many populations and to make things more complicated in Koreans, the most prevalent variant p.Arg1939Gln among Korean ANSD children frequently evaded detection by next generation sequencing (NGS), resulting in delayed genetic diagnosis and late cochlear implantation (CI). The aims of this study are to document the mutational and phenotypic spectrum of OTOF-related ANSD (DFNB9) in the Korean population, further establishing genotype-phenotype correlation and proposing a set of the most commonly found OTOF variants to be screened first.
Methods: Genetic diagnosis through the NGS-based sequencing was made on patients with ANSD in two tertiary hospitals. Genotype and phenotypes of eleven DFNB9 patients were reviewed. For data analysis, Mann-Whitney test and Fisher's exact test were applied.
Results: This study disclosed four prevalent variants in Koreans: p.Arg1939Gln with an allele frequency of 40.9%, p.Glu841Lys (13.6%), p.Leu1011Pro and p.Arg1856Trp (9.1%). Three novel variants (c.4227 + 5G > C, p.Gly1845Glu, and p.Pro1931Thr) were identified. Interestingly, a significant association of p.Arg1939Gln with worse ASSR thresholds was observed despite consistently no ABR response. Ten of 11 DFNB9 patients received CI for auditory rehabilitation, showing favorable outcomes with more rapid improvement on early-CI group (age at CI ≤ 18 mo.) than late-CI group.
Conclusions: This study included the largest Korean DFNB9 cohort to date and proposed a set of the most frequent four OTOF variants, allowing the potential prioritization of exons during Sanger sequencing. Further, a significant association of p.Arg1939Gln homozygotes with poor residual hearing was observed. We may have to suspect p.Arg1939Gln homozygosity in cases of poor auditory thresholds in ANSD children with putative negative OTOF variants solely screened by NGS. Reciprocal feedback between bench and clinics regarding DFNB9 would complement each other.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12967-018-1708-z | DOI Listing |
Mol Med
May 2025
Graduate Institute of Clinical Medicine, College of Medicine, National Taiwan University, Taipei, 100229, Taiwan.
Background: Pathogenic variants in OTOF are a major cause of auditory synaptopathy. However, challenges remain in interpreting OTOF variants, including difficulties in confirming haplotype phasing using traditional short-read sequencing (SRS) due to the large gene size, the potential incomplete penetrance of certain variants, and difficulties in assessing variants at non-canonical splice sites. This study aims to revisit the genetic landscape of OTOF variants in a Taiwanese non-syndromic auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder (ANSD) cohort using a combination of sequencing technologies, predictive tools, and experimental validations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Med Genet C Semin Med Genet
April 2025
Department of Otolaryngology and Communication Enhancement, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Usher syndrome, the most common form of deaf-blindness, displays extensive genetic, allelic, and phenotypic heterogeneity. The dual sensory impairment associated with this autosomal recessive disorder makes Usher syndrome an important target for gene therapy, with dozens of published preclinical studies targeting multiple Usher syndrome genes and using multiple gene therapy strategies. Nine genes have been conclusively linked to Usher syndrome; however, data on the prevalence and contribution of specific genetic variants is lacking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenes (Basel)
January 2025
Department of Hearing Implant Sciences, Shinshu University School of Medicine, Matsumoto 390-8621, Japan.
Background/objectives: The gene is reported to be the causative gene for non-syndromic recessive sensorineural hearing loss and auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder. About 300 variants have been reported, but there have been no reports to date on copy gain variants.
Methods: We identified a copy gain variant in the gene through short-read next-generation sequencing analysis from one patient with auditory neuropathy.
J Dev Biol
January 2025
Biology Department, Pace University, New York, NY 10038, USA.
The nematode is a proven model for identifying genes involved in human disease, and the study of reproduction, specifically spermatogenesis and fertilization, has led to significant contributions to our understanding of cellular function. Approximately 70 genes have been identified in that control spermatogenesis and fertilization ( and mutants). This review focuses on eight genes that have human orthologs with known pathogenic phenotypes.
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