Abstract
Although more than 140 genes have been associated with non-syndromic hereditary hearing loss (HL), at least half of the cases remain unexplained in medical genetic testing. One reason is that pathogenic variants are located in ‘novel’ deafness genes. A variant prioritization approach was used to identify novel (candidate) genes for HL. Exome-wide sequencing data were assessed for subjects with presumed hereditary HL that remained unexplained in medical genetic testing by gene-panel analysis. Cases in group AD had presumed autosomal dominantly inherited HL (n = 124), and in group AR, presumed autosomal recessive HL (n = 337). Variants in known and candidate deafness genes were prioritized based on allele frequencies and predicted effects. Selected variants were tested for their co-segregation with HL. Two cases were solved by variants in recently identified deafness genes (ABHD12, TRRAP). Variant prioritization also revealed potentially causative variants in candidate genes associated with recessive and X-linked HL. Importantly, missense variants in IKZF2 were found to co-segregate with dominantly inherited non-syndromic HL in three families. These variants specifically affected Zn2+-coordinating cysteine or histidine residues of the zinc finger motifs 2 and 3 of the encoded protein Helios. This finding indicates a complex genotype–phenotype correlation for IKZF2 defects, as this gene was previously associated with non-syndromic dysfunction of the immune system and ICHAD syndrome, including HL. The designed strategy for variant prioritization revealed that IKZF2 variants can underlie non-syndromic HL. The large number of candidate genes for HL and variants therein stress the importance of inclusion of family members for variant prioritization.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1379-1399 |
Number of pages | 21 |
Journal | Human Genetics |
Volume | 143 |
Issue number | 11 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Nov 2024 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© The Author(s) 2024.