PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

WFS1 mutation screening in a large series of Japanese hearing loss patients: Massively parallel DNA sequencing-based analysis.

  • Masafumi Kobayashi,
  • Maiko Miyagawa,
  • Shin-Ya Nishio,
  • Hideaki Moteki,
  • Taro Fujikawa,
  • Kenji Ohyama,
  • Hirofumi Sakaguchi,
  • Ikuyo Miyanohara,
  • Akiko Sugaya,
  • Yasushi Naito,
  • Shin-Ya Morita,
  • Yukihiko Kanda,
  • Masahiro Takahashi,
  • Kotaro Ishikawa,
  • Yuki Nagano,
  • Tetsuya Tono,
  • Chie Oshikawa,
  • Chiharu Kihara,
  • Haruo Takahashi,
  • Yoshihiro Noguchi,
  • Shin-Ichi Usami

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193359
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
p. e0193359

Abstract

Read online

A heterozygous mutation in the Wolfram syndrome type 1 gene (WFS1) causes autosomal dominant nonsyndromic hereditary hearing loss, DFNA6/14/38, or Wolfram-like syndrome. To date, more than 40 different mutations have been reported to be responsible for DFNA6/14/38. In the present study, WFS1 variants were screened in a large series of Japanese hearing loss (HL) patients to clarify the prevalence and clinical characteristics of DFNA6/14/38 and Wolfram-like syndrome. Massively parallel DNA sequencing of 68 target genes was performed in 2,549 unrelated Japanese HL patients to identify genomic variations responsible for HL. The detailed clinical features in patients with WFS1 variants were collected from medical charts and analyzed. We successfully identified 13 WFS1 variants in 19 probands: eight of the 13 variants were previously reported mutations, including three mutations (p.A684V, p.K836N, and p.E864K) known to cause Wolfram-like syndrome, and five were novel mutations. Variants were detected in 15 probands (2.5%) in 602 families with presumably autosomal dominant or mitochondrial HL, and in four probands (0.7%) in 559 sporadic cases; however, no variants were detected in the other 1,388 probands with autosomal recessive or unknown family history. Among the 30 individuals possessing variants, marked variations were observed in the onset of HL as well as in the presence of progressive HL and tinnitus. Vestibular symptoms, which had been rarely reported, were present in 7 out of 30 (23%) of the affected individuals. The most prevalent audiometric configuration was low-frequency type; however, some individuals had high-frequency HL. Haplotype analysis in three mutations (p.A716T, p.K836T, and p.E864K) suggested that the mutations occurred at these mutation hot spots. The present study provided new insights into the audiovestibular phenotypes in patients with WFS1 mutations.