Hereditary etiology of non-syndromic sensorineural hearing loss in the Republic of North Ossetia-Alania

PeerJ. 2023 Jan 30:11:e14514. doi: 10.7717/peerj.14514. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

More than 50% of congenital hearing loss is hereditary, in which the majority form is non-syndromic. In this study we estimate the most prevalent pathogenic genetic changes in an Ossetian cohort of patients. This is useful for local public health officials to promote genetic counseling of affected families with regard to high allele frequencies of prevalent pathogenic variants and assortative mating in the community of people with hearing loss. In this study, genetic heterogeneity of hereditary non-syndromic sensorineural hearing loss (NSNHL) in a cohort of 109 patients and an assessment of the frequency of two GJB2 gene pathogenic variants in a cohort of 349 healthy individuals from the populations of the Republic of North Ossetia-Alania (RNO-Alania) were assessed. The molecular genetic cause of NSNHL in the GJB2 gene in RNO-Alania was confirmed in ~30% of the cases, including ~27% in Ossetians. In Russian patients, the most frequent variant is GJB2:c.35delG (~83%). The GJB2:c.358_360delGAG variant was found to be the most frequent among Ossetians (~54%). Two genetic variants in GJB2, c.35delG and c.358_360delGAG, accounted for 91% of GJB2 pathogenic alleles in the Ossetian patients. A search for large genome rearrangements revealed etiological cause in two Ossetian patients, a deletion at the POU3F4 gene locus associated with X-linked hearing loss (type DFNX2). In another Ossetian patient, a biallelic pathogenic variant in the MYO15A gene caused hearing loss type DFNB3 was identified, and in one Russian family a heterozygous MYH14 gene variant associated with dominant NSNHL was found. Thus, the informative value of the diagnosis was ~37% among all patients with NSNHL from RNO-Alania and ~32% among the Ossetians. These estimates correspond to the literature data on the fraction of recessive genetic forms of hearing loss within the affected population. The importance of this study consists not only in the estimation of the most prevalent pathogenic genetic changes in the Ossetian cohort of patients which could be useful for the public health but also in the genetic counselling of the affected families with regard to the high allele frequencies of revealed pathogenic variants as well as to the assortative mating in community of people with hearing loss.

Keywords: GJB2; MYH14; MYO15A; Non-syndromic sensorineural hearing loss; North Ossetia–Alania; POU3F4.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Alleles
  • Connexin 26 / genetics
  • Connexins / genetics
  • Deafness* / genetics
  • Hearing Loss* / genetics
  • Hearing Loss, Sensorineural* / epidemiology
  • Humans
  • POU Domain Factors / genetics

Substances

  • Connexins
  • Connexin 26
  • POU3F4 protein, human
  • POU Domain Factors

Grants and funding

The research was supported by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation (the Federal Scientific-technical program for genetic technologies development for 2019–2027, agreement No 075-15-2021-1061, RF 193021X0029). There was no additional external funding received for this study. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.