Novel, pathogenic insertion variant of GSDME associates with autosomal dominant hearing loss in a large Chinese pedigree.

TitleNovel, pathogenic insertion variant of GSDME associates with autosomal dominant hearing loss in a large Chinese pedigree.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2024
AuthorsCheng, J, Li, T, Tan, Q, Fu, J, Zhang, L, Yang, L, Zhou, B, Yang, L, Fu, S, Linehan, AGrace, Fu, J
JournalJ Cell Mol Med
Volume28
Issue1
Paginatione18004
Date Published2024 Jan
ISSN1582-4934
KeywordsChina, Deafness, Hearing Loss, Hearing Loss, Sensorineural, Humans, Mutation, Pedigree
Abstract

Nonsyndromic hearing loss (NSHL) is a genetically diverse, highly heterogeneous condition characterised by deafness, and Gasdermin E (GSDME) variants have been identified as directly inducing autosomal dominant NSHL. While many NSHL cases associated with GSDME involve the skipping of exon 8, there is another, less understood pathogenic insertion variant specifically found in Chinese pedigrees that causes deafness, known as autosomal dominant 5 (DFNA5) hearing loss. In this study, we recruited a large Chinese pedigree, conducted whole-exome and Sanger sequencing to serve as a comprehensive clinical examination, and extracted genomic DNA samples for co-segregation analysis of the members. Conservation and expression analyses for GSDME were also conducted. Our clinical examinations revealed an autosomal dominant phenotype of hearing loss in the family. Genetic analysis identified a novel insertion variant in GSDME exon 8 (GSDME: NM_004403.3: c.1113_1114insGGGGTGCAGCTTACAGGGTGGGTGT: p. P372fs*36). This variant is segregated with the deafness phenotype of this pedigree. The GSDME gene was highly conserved in the different species we analysed, and its mRNA expression was ubiquitously low in different human tissues. In conclusion, we have successfully identified a novel pathogenic insertion variant of GSDME in a Chinese pedigree that causes deafness, shedding light on the genetic basis of hearing loss within this specific family. Our findings expand the spectrum of known variants associated with GSDME-related deafness and may further support both the underlying gain-of-function mechanism and functional associations of GSDME hearing loss variants.

DOI10.1111/jcmm.18004
Alternate JournalJ Cell Mol Med
PubMed ID37864300
PubMed Central IDPMC10805510
Grant List81672887 / / National Natural Science Foundation of China /
31701087 / / National Natural Science Foundation of China /
30371493 / / National Natural Science Foundation of China /
2018LZXNYD-YL01 / / The Joint Research Foundation of Luzhou City and Southwest Medical University /

Similar Publications