AI Article Synopsis

  • Autosomal recessive non-syndromic hearing loss (ARNSHL) is a common genetic cause of hearing impairment, especially in North Africa due to many consanguineous marriages.
  • The study focused on the LRTOMT c.242G>A variant, found in 5.02% of Tunisian and 2.94% of Libyan deaf patients, indicating its relevance in those populations.
  • The variant has a common origin linked to the Berber population, estimated to be between 2025 and 3425 years old, suggesting it can serve as a biomarker for deafness and as a tool for tracing Berber ancestry.

Article Abstract

Autosomal recessive non-syndromic hearing loss (ARNSHL) is the most common inherited sensory impairment. It is particularly frequent in North African populations who have a high rate of consanguineous marriage. The c.242G>A homozygous variant in LRTOMT gene was previously established as pathogenic and is associated with NSHL in both humans and mice. The aim of this study is to determine the carrier frequency for the LRTOMT c.242G>A variant and also to estimate its age in addition to evaluating its diagnostic potential as a deafness biomarker among various populations and ethnicities in Northern African countries. A total of 179 Tunisian and 34 Libyan unrelated deafness patients were screened for this variant. The homozygous c.242G>A variant was found in 5.02% and 2.94% in Tunisian and Libyan families, respectively. Subsequent screening for this variant in 263 healthy controls of various ethnicities (136 Tunisian Berbers, 32 Andalusian and 95 Tunisian from undefined ethnic origin) revealed higher frequency for the heterozygous state among Tunisians of Berber origin only (19.11%). Genotyping 7 microsatellite markers nearby the variant location in ARNSHL patients who had the homozygous variant revealed the same haplotype suggesting a common founder origin for this variant. The age of this variant was estimated to be between 2025 and 3425 years (this corresponds to 3400 years when the variant rate was set at 10 or 2600 years when the variant rate is set at 10 ), spreading along with the Berber population who migrated to North Africa. In conclusion, the LRTOMT c.242G>A homozygous variant could be used as a useful deafness biomarker for North African ARNSHL patients meanwhile the heterozygous variant could be utilized in genealogical studies for tracing those of the Berber ethnic group.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8580077PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mgg3.1810DOI Listing

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