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Waardenburg syndrome type II in a Chinese pedigree caused by frameshift mutation in the SOX10 gene

Authors :
Lin Zhang
Yuantao Zhou
Li Li
Yu Zhang
Quan-Dong Chen
Tiesong Zhang
Biao Ruan
Xiaoli He
Jing Ma
Source :
Bioscience Reports
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Portland Press Ltd., 2021.

Abstract

Waardenburg syndrome (WS) is a congenital hereditary disease, attributed to the most common symptoms of sensorineural deafness and iris hypopigmentation. It is also known as the hearing-pigmentation deficient syndrome. Mutations on SOXl0 gene often lead to congenital deafness and has been shown to play an important role in the pathogenesis of WS. We investigated one family of five members, with four patients exhibiting the classic form of WS2, whose DNA samples were analyzed by the technique of Whole-exome sequencing (WES). From analysis of WES data, we found that both the mother and all three children in the family have a heterozygous mutation on the Sex Determining Region Y - Box 10 (SOX10) gene. The mutation was c.298_300delinsGG in exon 2 of SOX10 (NM_006941), which leads to a frameshift of nine nucleotides, hence the amino acids (p. S100Rfs*9) are altered and the protein translation may be terminated prematurely. Further flow cytometry confirmed significant down-regulation of SOX10 protein, which indicated the SOX10 gene mutation was responsible for the pathogenesis of WS2 patients. In addition, we speculated that some other mutated genes might be related to disease phenotype in this family, which might also participate in promoting the progression of WS2.

Details

ISSN :
15734935 and 01448463
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bioscience Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4e47fac2e423302c353501ca2456b124