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GJB2 mutation spectrum in 2063 Chinese patients with nonsyndromic hearing impairment

Authors :
Dai, Pu
Yu, Fei
Liu, Xuezhong
Wang, Guojian
Yuan, Yongyi
Huang, Deliang
Kang, Dongyang
Yuan, Huijun
Yao, Kun
Hao, Jinsheng
He, Yong
Wang, Youqin
Ye, Qing
Yu, Youjun
Lin, Hongyan
Liu, Lijia
Deng, Wei
Zhu, Xiuhui
You, Yiwen
Cui, Jinghong
Hou, Nongsheng
Xu, Xuehai
Song, Rendong
Lin, Yongjun
Sun, Shuanzhu
Zhang, Ruining
Ma, Yuebing
Zhu, Shanxiang
Han, Dongyi
Wong, Lee-Jun C
Wu, Bai-Lin
Han, Bing
Li, Qi
Liu, Xin
Zhang, Xin
He, Jia
Zhang, Jin
Tang, Liang
Wu, Hao
Source :
Dai, Pu, Fei Yu, Bing Han, Xuezhong Liu, Guojian Wang, Qi Li, Yongyi Yuan, et al. 2009. GJB2 mutation spectrum in 2063 Chinese patients with nonsyndromic hearing impairment. Journal of Translational Medicine 7: 26.
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
BioMed Central, 2009.

Abstract

Background: Mutations in GJB2 are the most common molecular defects responsible for autosomal recessive nonsyndromic hearing impairment (NSHI). The mutation spectra of this gene vary among different ethnic groups. Methods: In order to understand the spectrum and frequency of GJB2 mutations in the Chinese population, the coding region of the GJB2 gene from 2063 unrelated patients with NSHI was PCR amplified and sequenced. Results: A total of 23 pathogenic mutations were identified. Among them, five (p.W3X, c.99delT, c.155_c.158delTCTG, c.512_c.513insAACG, and p.Y152X) are novel. Three hundred and seven patients carry two confirmed pathogenic mutations, including 178 homozygotes and 129 compound heterozygotes. One hundred twenty five patients carry only one mutant allele. Thus, GJB2 mutations account for 17.9% of the mutant alleles in 2063 NSHI patients. Overall, 92.6% (684/739) of the pathogenic mutations are frame-shift truncation or nonsense mutations. The four prevalent mutations; c.235delC, c.299_c.300delAT, c.176_c.191del16, and c.35delG, account for 88.0% of all mutantalleles identified. The frequency of GJB2 mutations (alleles) varies from 4% to 30.4% among different regions of China. It also varies among different sub-ethnic groups. Conclusion: In some regions of China, testing of the three most common mutations can identify at least one GJB2 mutant allele in all patients. In other regions such as Tibet, the three most common mutations account for only 16% the GJB2 mutant alleles. Thus, in this region, sequencing of GJB2 would be recommended. In addition, the etiology of more than 80% of the mutant alleles for NSHI in China remains to be identified. Analysis of other NSHI related genes will be necessary.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14795876
Database :
Digital Access to Scholarship at Harvard (DASH)
Journal :
Dai, Pu, Fei Yu, Bing Han, Xuezhong Liu, Guojian Wang, Qi Li, Yongyi Yuan, et al. 2009. GJB2 mutation spectrum in 2063 Chinese patients with nonsyndromic hearing impairment. Journal of Translational Medicine 7: 26.
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edshld.1.4853395
Document Type :
Journal Article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-7-26