Abstract
Mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) are one of the most important causes of sensorineural hearing loss, especially in the MT-RNR1 gene. In the present study we have performed mutational screening for m.1555A>G and a region of the MT-RNR1 gene in 303 unrelated patients (including family members of 25 probands) with nonsyndromic hearing loss and 200 controls. Three homoplasmic variants, namely, m.1453A>G, 1462G>A, and 1508C>T, were identified in addition to the known deafness-associated m.1555A>G mutation in the MT-RNR1 gene. All the variants were detected only in the patients and not in the controls. m.1555A>G was detected in three probands amounting to 1.0%. Prediction of RNA secondary structure showed changes in all the three variants, the most severe being in m.1453A>G that was inherited in a typical maternal pattern in two families. Screening of GJB2 and GJB6 genes in all these probands revealed cosegregation of the p.W24X mutation (GJB2) in one family with m.1453A>G. Only the proband carrying the p.W24X mutation in a homozygous state expressed the condition while heterozygous and normal homozygous relatives had normal hearing in spite of having the mutation in MT-RNR1. The conservation index (CI) of m.1453A>G was found to be 82%, suggesting it to be a possibly deleterious mutation. Functional studies using cell lines derived from muscle tissue of these patients may reveal the pathogenic mechanism of deafness in them.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
