Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases (Aug 2020)

Variant c.2158-2A>G in MANBA is an important and frequent cause of hereditary hearing loss and beta-mannosidosis among the Czech and Slovak Roma population- evidence for a new ethnic-specific variant

  • Dana Safka Brozkova,
  • Lukas Varga,
  • Anna Uhrova Meszarosova,
  • Zuzana Slobodova,
  • Martina Skopkova,
  • Andrea Soltysova,
  • Andrej Ficek,
  • Jan Jencik,
  • Jana Lastuvkova,
  • Daniela Gasperikova,
  • Pavel Seeman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-020-01508-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background The Roma are a European ethnic minority threatened by several recessive diseases. Variants in MANBA cause a rare lysosomal storage disorder named beta-mannosidosis whose clinical manifestation includes deafness and mental retardation. Since 1986, only 23 patients with beta-mannosidosis and biallelic MANBA variants have been described worldwide. Results We now report on further 10 beta-mannosidosis patients of Roma origin from eight families in the Czech and Slovak Republics with hearing loss, mental retardation and homozygous pathogenic variants in MANBA. MANBA variant c.2158-2A>G screening among 345 anonymized normal hearing controls from Roma populations revealed a carrier/heterozygote frequency of 3.77%. This is about 925 times higher than the frequency of this variant in the gnomAD public database and classifies the c.2158-2A>G variant as a prevalent, ethnic-specific variant causing hearing loss and mental retardation in a homozygous state. The frequency of heterozygotes/carriers is similar to another pathogenic variant c.71G>A (p.W24*) in GJB2, regarded as the most frequent variant causing deafness in Roma populations. Conlcusion Beta-mannosidosis, due to a homozygous c.2158-2A>G MANBA variant, is an important and previously unknown cause of hearing loss and mental retardation among Central European Roma.

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