Cargando…

Common Molecular Etiologies Are Rare in Nonsyndromic Tibetan Chinese Patients with Hearing Impairment

BACKGROUND: Thirty thousand infants are born every year with congenital hearing impairment in mainland China. Racial and regional factors are important in clinical diagnosis of genetic deafness. However, molecular etiology of hearing impairment in the Tibetan Chinese population living in the Tibetan...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Yuan, Yongyi, Zhang, Xun, Huang, Shasha, Zuo, Lujie, Zhang, Guozheng, Song, Yueshuai, Wang, Guojian, Wang, Hongtian, Huang, Deliang, Han, Dongyi, Dai, Pu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3289614/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22389666
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030720
_version_ 1782224881923915776
author Yuan, Yongyi
Zhang, Xun
Huang, Shasha
Zuo, Lujie
Zhang, Guozheng
Song, Yueshuai
Wang, Guojian
Wang, Hongtian
Huang, Deliang
Han, Dongyi
Dai, Pu
author_facet Yuan, Yongyi
Zhang, Xun
Huang, Shasha
Zuo, Lujie
Zhang, Guozheng
Song, Yueshuai
Wang, Guojian
Wang, Hongtian
Huang, Deliang
Han, Dongyi
Dai, Pu
author_sort Yuan, Yongyi
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Thirty thousand infants are born every year with congenital hearing impairment in mainland China. Racial and regional factors are important in clinical diagnosis of genetic deafness. However, molecular etiology of hearing impairment in the Tibetan Chinese population living in the Tibetan Plateau has not been investigated. To provide appropriate genetic testing and counseling to Tibetan families, we investigated molecular etiology of nonsyndromic deafness in this population. METHODS: A total of 114 unrelated deaf Tibetan children from the Tibet Autonomous Region were enrolled. Five prominent deafness-related genes, GJB2, SLC26A4, GJB6, POU3F4, and mtDNA 12S rRNA, were analyzed. Inner ear development was evaluated by temporal CT. A total of 106 Tibetan hearing normal individuals were included as genetic controls. For radiological comparison, 120 patients, mainly of Han ethnicity, with sensorineural hearing loss were analyzed by temporal CT. RESULTS: None of the Tibetan patients carried diallelic GJB2 or SLC26A4 mutations. Two patients with a history of aminoglycoside usage carried homogeneous mtDNA 12S rRNA A1555G mutation. Two controls were homozygous for 12S rRNA A1555G. There were no mutations in GJB6 or POU3F4. A diagnosis of inner ear malformation was made in 20.18% of the Tibetan patients and 21.67% of the Han deaf group. Enlarged vestibular aqueduct, the most common inner ear deformity, was not found in theTibetan patients, but was seen in 18.33% of the Han patients. Common molecular etiologies, GJB2 and SLC26A4 mutations, were rare in the Tibetan Chinese deaf population. CONCLUSION: The mutation spectrum of hearing loss differs significantly between Chinese Tibetan patients and Han patients. The incidence of inner ear malformation in Tibetans is almost as high as that in Han deaf patients, but the types of malformation vary greatly. Hypoxia and special environment in plateau may be one cause of developmental inner ear deformity in this population.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3289614
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2012
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-32896142012-03-02 Common Molecular Etiologies Are Rare in Nonsyndromic Tibetan Chinese Patients with Hearing Impairment Yuan, Yongyi Zhang, Xun Huang, Shasha Zuo, Lujie Zhang, Guozheng Song, Yueshuai Wang, Guojian Wang, Hongtian Huang, Deliang Han, Dongyi Dai, Pu PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Thirty thousand infants are born every year with congenital hearing impairment in mainland China. Racial and regional factors are important in clinical diagnosis of genetic deafness. However, molecular etiology of hearing impairment in the Tibetan Chinese population living in the Tibetan Plateau has not been investigated. To provide appropriate genetic testing and counseling to Tibetan families, we investigated molecular etiology of nonsyndromic deafness in this population. METHODS: A total of 114 unrelated deaf Tibetan children from the Tibet Autonomous Region were enrolled. Five prominent deafness-related genes, GJB2, SLC26A4, GJB6, POU3F4, and mtDNA 12S rRNA, were analyzed. Inner ear development was evaluated by temporal CT. A total of 106 Tibetan hearing normal individuals were included as genetic controls. For radiological comparison, 120 patients, mainly of Han ethnicity, with sensorineural hearing loss were analyzed by temporal CT. RESULTS: None of the Tibetan patients carried diallelic GJB2 or SLC26A4 mutations. Two patients with a history of aminoglycoside usage carried homogeneous mtDNA 12S rRNA A1555G mutation. Two controls were homozygous for 12S rRNA A1555G. There were no mutations in GJB6 or POU3F4. A diagnosis of inner ear malformation was made in 20.18% of the Tibetan patients and 21.67% of the Han deaf group. Enlarged vestibular aqueduct, the most common inner ear deformity, was not found in theTibetan patients, but was seen in 18.33% of the Han patients. Common molecular etiologies, GJB2 and SLC26A4 mutations, were rare in the Tibetan Chinese deaf population. CONCLUSION: The mutation spectrum of hearing loss differs significantly between Chinese Tibetan patients and Han patients. The incidence of inner ear malformation in Tibetans is almost as high as that in Han deaf patients, but the types of malformation vary greatly. Hypoxia and special environment in plateau may be one cause of developmental inner ear deformity in this population. Public Library of Science 2012-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3289614/ /pubmed/22389666 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030720 Text en Yuan et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Yuan, Yongyi
Zhang, Xun
Huang, Shasha
Zuo, Lujie
Zhang, Guozheng
Song, Yueshuai
Wang, Guojian
Wang, Hongtian
Huang, Deliang
Han, Dongyi
Dai, Pu
Common Molecular Etiologies Are Rare in Nonsyndromic Tibetan Chinese Patients with Hearing Impairment
title Common Molecular Etiologies Are Rare in Nonsyndromic Tibetan Chinese Patients with Hearing Impairment
title_full Common Molecular Etiologies Are Rare in Nonsyndromic Tibetan Chinese Patients with Hearing Impairment
title_fullStr Common Molecular Etiologies Are Rare in Nonsyndromic Tibetan Chinese Patients with Hearing Impairment
title_full_unstemmed Common Molecular Etiologies Are Rare in Nonsyndromic Tibetan Chinese Patients with Hearing Impairment
title_short Common Molecular Etiologies Are Rare in Nonsyndromic Tibetan Chinese Patients with Hearing Impairment
title_sort common molecular etiologies are rare in nonsyndromic tibetan chinese patients with hearing impairment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3289614/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22389666
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030720
work_keys_str_mv AT yuanyongyi commonmolecularetiologiesarerareinnonsyndromictibetanchinesepatientswithhearingimpairment
AT zhangxun commonmolecularetiologiesarerareinnonsyndromictibetanchinesepatientswithhearingimpairment
AT huangshasha commonmolecularetiologiesarerareinnonsyndromictibetanchinesepatientswithhearingimpairment
AT zuolujie commonmolecularetiologiesarerareinnonsyndromictibetanchinesepatientswithhearingimpairment
AT zhangguozheng commonmolecularetiologiesarerareinnonsyndromictibetanchinesepatientswithhearingimpairment
AT songyueshuai commonmolecularetiologiesarerareinnonsyndromictibetanchinesepatientswithhearingimpairment
AT wangguojian commonmolecularetiologiesarerareinnonsyndromictibetanchinesepatientswithhearingimpairment
AT wanghongtian commonmolecularetiologiesarerareinnonsyndromictibetanchinesepatientswithhearingimpairment
AT huangdeliang commonmolecularetiologiesarerareinnonsyndromictibetanchinesepatientswithhearingimpairment
AT handongyi commonmolecularetiologiesarerareinnonsyndromictibetanchinesepatientswithhearingimpairment
AT daipu commonmolecularetiologiesarerareinnonsyndromictibetanchinesepatientswithhearingimpairment