1. Academic Validation
  2. A C-terminal nonsense mutation links PTPRQ with autosomal-dominant hearing loss, DFNA73

A C-terminal nonsense mutation links PTPRQ with autosomal-dominant hearing loss, DFNA73

  • Genet Med. 2018 Jun;20(6):614-621. doi: 10.1038/gim.2017.155.
Tobias Eisenberger 1 Nataliya Di Donato 2 Christian Decker 1 Andrea Delle Vedove 3 Christine Neuhaus 1 Gudrun Nürnberg 4 Mohammad Toliat 4 Peter Nürnberg 4 5 Dirk Mürbe 6 Hanno Jörn Bolz 1 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Bioscientia Center for Human Genetics, Ingelheim, Germany.
  • 2 Institut für Klinische Genetik, Medizinische Fakultät Carl Gustav Carus, Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden, Germany.
  • 3 Institute of Human Genetics, University Hospital of Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
  • 4 Cologne Center for Genomics and Center for Molecular Medicine Cologne, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
  • 5 Cologne Excellence Cluster on Cellular Stress Responses in Aging-Associated Diseases, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
  • 6 Division of Phoniatrics and Audiology, Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden, Germany.
Abstract

PurposeHearing loss is genetically extremely heterogeneous, making it suitable for next-generation sequencing (NGS). We identified a four-generation family with nonsyndromic mild to severe hearing loss of the mid- to high frequencies and onset from early childhood to second decade in seven members.MethodsNGS of 66 deafness genes, Sanger sequencing, genome-wide linkage analysis, whole-exome sequencing (WES), semiquantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction.ResultsWe identified a heterozygous nonsense mutation, c.6881G>A (p.Trp2294*), in the last coding exon of PTPRQ. PTPRQ has been linked with recessive (DFNB84A), but not dominant deafness. NGS and Sanger sequencing of all exons (including alternatively spliced 5' and N-scan-predicted exons of a putative "extended" transcript) did not identify a second mutation. The highest logarithm of the odds score was in the PTPRQ-containing region on chromosome 12, and p.Trp2294* cosegregated with hearing loss. WES did not identify other cosegregating candidate variants from the mapped region. PTPRQ expression in patient fibroblasts indicated that the mutant allele escapes nonsense-mediated decay (NMD).ConclusionKnown PTPRQ mutations are recessive and do not affect the C-terminal exon. In contrast to recessive loss-of-function mutations, c.6881G>A transcripts may escape NMD. PTPRQTrp2294* protein would lack only six terminal residues and could exert a dominant-negative effect, a possible explanation for allelic deafness, DFNA73, clinically and genetically distinct from DFNB84A.

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