TY - JOUR
T1 - LHFPL5 mutation
T2 - A rare cause of non-syndromic autosomal recessive hearing loss
AU - Al-Amri, Ahmed H.
AU - Al Saegh, Abeer
AU - Al-Mamari, Watfa
AU - El-Asrag, Mohammed E.
AU - Al-Kindi, Mohammed N.
AU - Al Khabouri, Mazin
AU - Al Wardy, Nadia
AU - Al Lamki, Khalsa
AU - Gabr, Ahlam
AU - Idris, Ahmed
AU - Inglehearn, Chris F.
AU - Clapcote, Steven J.
AU - Ali, Manir
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was funded by a scholarship awarded to AHA by the Oman Ministry of Higher Education .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018
PY - 2019/12
Y1 - 2019/12
N2 - Hearing loss is a debilitating disorder that impairs language acquisition, resulting in disability in children and potential isolation in adulthood. Its onset can have a genetic basis, though environmental factors, which are often preventable, can also cause the condition. The genetic forms are highly heterogeneous, and early detection is necessary to arrange appropriate patient support. Here we report the molecular basis of hereditary hearing loss in a consanguineous family with multiple affected members from Oman. Combining homozygosity mapping with whole exome sequencing identified a novel homozygous nucleotide substitution c.575T > C in the lipoma HMGIC fusion partner-like 5 gene (LHFPL5), that converted the 192nd amino acid residue in the protein from a leucine to a proline, p.(Leu192Pro). Sanger sequencing confirmed segregation with the disease phenotype as expected for a recessive condition and the variant was absent in 123,490 subjects from various disease-specific and population genetic studies as well as 150 unrelated individuals and 35 deaf patients of Omani ethnicity. This study, which describes a novel LHFPL5 mutation in a family of Omani origin with hereditary hearing loss, supports previous clinical descriptions of the condition and contributes to the genetic spectrum of mutations in this form of deafness.
AB - Hearing loss is a debilitating disorder that impairs language acquisition, resulting in disability in children and potential isolation in adulthood. Its onset can have a genetic basis, though environmental factors, which are often preventable, can also cause the condition. The genetic forms are highly heterogeneous, and early detection is necessary to arrange appropriate patient support. Here we report the molecular basis of hereditary hearing loss in a consanguineous family with multiple affected members from Oman. Combining homozygosity mapping with whole exome sequencing identified a novel homozygous nucleotide substitution c.575T > C in the lipoma HMGIC fusion partner-like 5 gene (LHFPL5), that converted the 192nd amino acid residue in the protein from a leucine to a proline, p.(Leu192Pro). Sanger sequencing confirmed segregation with the disease phenotype as expected for a recessive condition and the variant was absent in 123,490 subjects from various disease-specific and population genetic studies as well as 150 unrelated individuals and 35 deaf patients of Omani ethnicity. This study, which describes a novel LHFPL5 mutation in a family of Omani origin with hereditary hearing loss, supports previous clinical descriptions of the condition and contributes to the genetic spectrum of mutations in this form of deafness.
KW - Deafness
KW - Exome sequencing
KW - Homozygosity mapping
KW - LHFPL5
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ejmg.2018.11.026
DO - 10.1016/j.ejmg.2018.11.026
M3 - Article
C2 - 30476627
AN - SCOPUS:85057385079
SN - 1769-7212
VL - 62
JO - European Journal of Medical Genetics
JF - European Journal of Medical Genetics
IS - 12
M1 - 103592
ER -