Genes (Mar 2020)

Clinical Characteristics and In Vitro Analysis of <i>MYO6</i> Variants Causing Late-Onset Progressive Hearing Loss

  • Shin-ichiro Oka,
  • Timothy F. Day,
  • Shin-ya Nishio,
  • Hideaki Moteki,
  • Maiko Miyagawa,
  • Shinya Morita,
  • Shuji Izumi,
  • Tetsuo Ikezono,
  • Satoko Abe,
  • Jun Nakayama,
  • Misako Hyogo,
  • Nobuhiko Okamoto,
  • Natsumi Uehara,
  • Chie Oshikawa,
  • Shin-ichiro Kitajiri,
  • Shin-ichi Usami

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes11030273
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
p. 273

Abstract

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MYO6 is known as a genetic cause of autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive inherited hearing loss. In this study, to clarify the frequency and clinical characteristics of hearing loss caused by MYO6 gene mutations, a large-scale genetic analysis of Japanese patients with hearing loss was performed. By means of massively parallel DNA sequencing (MPS) using next-generation sequencing for 8074 Japanese families, we found 27 MYO6 variants in 33 families, 22 of which are novel. In total, 2.40% of autosomal dominant sensorineural hearing loss (ADSNHL) in families in this study (32 out of 1336) was found to be caused by MYO6 mutations. The present study clarified that most cases showed juvenile-onset progressive hearing loss and their hearing deteriorated markedly after 40 years of age. The estimated hearing deterioration was found to be 0.57 dB per year; when restricted to change after 40 years of age, the deterioration speed was accelerated to 1.07 dB per year. To obtain supportive evidence for pathogenicity, variants identified in the patients were introduced to MYO6 cDNA by site-directed mutagenesis and overexpressed in epithelial cells. They were then assessed for their effects on espin1-induced microvilli formation. Cells with wildtype myosin 6 and espin1 co-expressed created long microvilli, while co-expression with mutant constructs resulted in severely shortened microvilli. In conclusion, the present data clearly showed that MYO6 is one of the genes to keep in mind with regard to ADSNHL, and the molecular characteristics of the identified gene variants suggest that a possible pathology seems to result from malformed stereocilia of the cochlear hair cells.

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