Progressive sensorineural hearing loss and normal vestibular function in a Dutch DFNB7/11 family with a novel mutation in TMC1

AMR De Heer, RWJ Collin, PLM Huygen… - Audiology and …, 2011 - karger.com
AMR De Heer, RWJ Collin, PLM Huygen, M Schraders, J Oostrik, M Rouwette, HPM Kunst…
Audiology and Neurotology, 2011karger.com
In a Dutch family with autosomal recessive hearing loss, genome-wide single-nucleotide
polymorphism analysis mapped the genetic defect to the DFNB7/11 locus. A novel
homozygous A-to-G change in the TMC1 gene was detected near the splice donor site of
intron 19 (c. 1763+ 3A→ G) segregating with the hearing loss in this family. One of the 6
transmembrane domains and the actual TMC channel domain are predicted to be absent in
the mutant protein. The sensorineural hearing impairment in this DFNB7/11 family has a …
Abstract
In a Dutch family with autosomal recessive hearing loss, genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism analysis mapped the genetic defect to the DFNB7/11 locus. A novel homozygous A-to-G change in the TMC1 gene was detected near the splice donor site of intron 19 (c. 1763+ 3A→ G) segregating with the hearing loss in this family. One of the 6 transmembrane domains and the actual TMC channel domain are predicted to be absent in the mutant protein. The sensorineural hearing impairment in this DFNB7/11 family has a postlingual onset. Audiometric analysis initially showed a steeply downward-sloping threshold configuration. The progressive phenotype in this family resembles the phenotype previously described for families with dominant TMC1 mutations (DFNA36) rather than that of families with recessive TMC1 mutations (DFNB7/11) which invariably cause severe-to-profound prelingual hearing impairment.
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