TY - JOUR
T1 - A novel KCNQ4 one-base deletion in a large pedigree with hearing loss
T2 - Implication for the genotype-phenotype correlation
AU - Kamada, Fumiaki
AU - Kure, Shigeo
AU - Kudo, Takayuki
AU - Suzuki, Yoichi
AU - Oshima, Takeshi
AU - Ichinohe, Akiko
AU - Kojima, Kanako
AU - Niihori, Tetsuya
AU - Kanno, Junko
AU - Narumi, Yoko
AU - Narisawa, Ayumi
AU - Kato, Kumi
AU - Aoki, Yoko
AU - Ikeda, Katsuhisa
AU - Kobayashi, Toshimitsu
AU - Matsubara, Yoichi
PY - 2006/5
Y1 - 2006/5
N2 - Autosomal-dominant, nonsyndromic hearing impairment is clinically and genetically heterogeneous. We encountered a large Japanese pedigree in which nonsyndromic hearing loss was inherited in an autosomal-dominant fashion. A genome-wide linkage study indicated linkage to the DFNA2 locus on chromosome 1p34. Mutational analysis of KCNQ4 encoding a potassium channel revealed a novel one-base deletion in exon 1, c.211delC, which generated a profoundly truncated protein without transmembrane domains (p.Q71fsX138). Previously, six missense mutations and one 13-base deletion, c.211_223del, had been reported in KCNQ4. Patients with the KCNQ4 missense mutations had younger-onset and more profound hearing loss than patients with the 211_223del mutation. In our current study, 12 individuals with the c.211delC mutation manifested late-onset and pure high-frequency hearing loss. Our results support the genotype-phenotype correlation that the KCNQ4 deletions are associated with later-onset and milder hearing impairment than the missense mutations. The phenotypic difference may be caused by the difference in pathogenic mechanisms: haploinsufficiency in deletions and dominant-negative effect in missense mutations.
AB - Autosomal-dominant, nonsyndromic hearing impairment is clinically and genetically heterogeneous. We encountered a large Japanese pedigree in which nonsyndromic hearing loss was inherited in an autosomal-dominant fashion. A genome-wide linkage study indicated linkage to the DFNA2 locus on chromosome 1p34. Mutational analysis of KCNQ4 encoding a potassium channel revealed a novel one-base deletion in exon 1, c.211delC, which generated a profoundly truncated protein without transmembrane domains (p.Q71fsX138). Previously, six missense mutations and one 13-base deletion, c.211_223del, had been reported in KCNQ4. Patients with the KCNQ4 missense mutations had younger-onset and more profound hearing loss than patients with the 211_223del mutation. In our current study, 12 individuals with the c.211delC mutation manifested late-onset and pure high-frequency hearing loss. Our results support the genotype-phenotype correlation that the KCNQ4 deletions are associated with later-onset and milder hearing impairment than the missense mutations. The phenotypic difference may be caused by the difference in pathogenic mechanisms: haploinsufficiency in deletions and dominant-negative effect in missense mutations.
KW - DFNA2
KW - Haploinsufficiency
KW - KCNQ4
KW - Linkage
KW - Mutation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33745005751&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=33745005751&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10038-006-0384-7
DO - 10.1007/s10038-006-0384-7
M3 - Article
C2 - 16596322
AN - SCOPUS:33745005751
SN - 1434-5161
VL - 51
SP - 455
EP - 460
JO - Journal of Human Genetics
JF - Journal of Human Genetics
IS - 5
ER -