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The homozygous p. V37I variant of GJB2 is associated with diverse hearing phenotypes
Author(s) -
Chai Y.,
Chen D.,
Sun L.,
Li L.,
Chen Y.,
Pang X.,
Zhang L.,
Wu H.,
Yang T.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
clinical genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.543
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1399-0004
pISSN - 0009-9163
DOI - 10.1111/cge.12387
Subject(s) - cohort , penetrance , phenotype , hearing loss , medicine , genetics , mutation , gene , biology , audiology
The homozygous p. V37I variant of GJB2 is frequent in East Asians and has been reported to have a pathogenic role in mild‐to‐moderate hearing impairment (HI). In this study, we investigated the prevalence and phenotypic spectrum of homozygous p. V37I in three Chinese Han cohorts with severe‐to‐profound HI ( n = 857, Cohort S), mild‐to‐moderate HI ( n = 88, Cohort M) and normal hearing ( n = 1550, Cohort N). Sequencing of GJB2 showed that homozygous p. V37I was detected in 1.63% (14/857), 12.5% (11/88) and 0.32% (5/1550) of subjects in Cohorts S, M and N, respectively. It was strongly associated with both mild‐to‐moderate (p = 2.0 × 10 −11 ) and severe‐to‐profound (p = 0.001) HI, but was estimated to have a rather low penetrance (17%). Among the hearing impaired subjects with homozygous p. V37I , the onset of HI was congenital in 65% (11/17) and delayed in 35% (6/17). By targeted next‐generation sequencing of 79 known deafness genes, we identified an additional homozygous pathogenic mutation of CDH23 in 1 of 14 p. V37I homozygous subjects from Cohort S. Our study suggested that homozygous p. V37I is associated with a broader spectrum of hearing phenotypes than previously revealed. Data presented in this study can be effectively applied to clinical evaluation and genetic counseling of people carrying this variant.