Whole mitochondrial genome screening in maternally inherited non-syndromic hearing impairment using a microarray resequencing mitochondrial DNA chip

Archive ouverte

Lévêque, Marianne | Marlin, Sandrine | Jonard, Laurence | Procaccio, Vincent | Reynier, Pascal | Amati-Bonneau, Patrizia | Baulande, Sylvain | Pierron, Denis | Lacombe, Didier | Duriez, Françoise | Francannet, Christine | Mom, Thierry | Journel, Hubert | Catros, Hélène | Drouin-Garraud, Valérie | Obstoy, Marie-Françoise | Dollfus, Hélène | Eliot, Marie-Madeleine | Faivre, Laurence | Duvillard, Christian | Couderc, Remy | Garabedian, Eréa-Noël | Petit, Christine | Feldmann, Delphine | Denoyelle, Françoise

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations have been implicated in non-syndromic hearing loss either as primary or as predisposing factors. As only a part of the mitochondrial genome is usually explored in deafness, its prevalence is probably under-estimated. Among 1350 families with non-syndromic sensorineural hearing loss collected through a French collaborative network, we selected 29 large families with a clear maternal lineage and screened them for known mtDNA mutations in 12S rRNA, tRNASer(UCN) and tRNALeu(UUR) genes. When no mutation could be identified, a whole mitochondrial genome screening was performed, using a microarray resequencing chip: the MitoChip version 2.0 developed by Affymetrix Inc. Known mtDNA mutations was found in nine of the 29 families, which are described in the article: five with A1555G, two with the T7511C, one with 7472insC and one with A3243G mutation. In the remaining 20 families, the resequencing Mitochip detected 258 mitochondrial homoplasmic variants and 107 potentially heteroplasmic variants. Controls were made by direct sequencing on selected fragments and showed a high sensibility of the MitoChip but a low specificity, especially for heteroplasmic variations. An original analysis on the basis of species conservation, frequency and phylogenetic investigation was performed to select the more probably pathogenic variants. The entire genome analysis allowed us to identify five additional families with a putatively pathogenic mitochondrial variant: T669C, C1537T, G8078A, G12236A and G15077A. These results indicate that the new MitoChip platform is a rapid and valuable tool for identification of new mtDNA mutations in deafness.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

SLC26A4 gene is frequently involved in nonsyndromic hearing impairment with enlarged vestibular aqueduct in Caucasian populations.

Archive ouverte | Albert, Sébastien | CCSD

Sensorineural hearing loss is the most frequent sensory deficit of childhood and is of genetic origin in up to 75% of cases. It has been shown that mutations of the SLC26A4 (PDS) gene were involved in syndromic deafness characteri...

Screening of SLC26A4, FOXI1 and KCNJ10 genes in unilateral hearing impairment with ipsilateral enlarged vestibular aqueduct

Archive ouverte | Jonard, Laurence | CCSD

International audience. Objective: To investigate the implication of SLC26A4, FOXI and KCNJ10 genes in unilateral hearing impairment associated with ipsilateral inner ear malformation (Enlargement of the vestibular ...

GJB2 and GJB6 Mutations

Archive ouverte | Marlin, Sandrine | CCSD

International audience. Objectives: To analyze the clinical features of hearing impairment and to search for correlations with the genotype in patients with DFNB1.Design: Case series.Setting: Collaborative study in ...

Chargement des enrichissements...