Rare Deletions or Large Duplications Contribute to Genetic Variation in Patients with Severe Tinnitus and Meniere Disease
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Escalera Balsera, Alba; Parra Pérez, Alberto M.; Gallego Martínez, Álvaro; Frejo, Lidia; Martín Lagos, Juan; Rivero de Jesús, Victoria; Pérez Vázquez, Paz; Pérez Carpena, Patricia; López Escámez, José AntonioEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Meniere disease Tinnitus Genomics
Date
2023-12-22Referencia bibliográfica
Escalera-Balsera, A.; Parra-Perez, A.M.; Gallego-Martinez, A.; Frejo, L.; Martin-Lagos, J.; Rivero de Jesus, V.; Pérez-Vázquez, P.; Perez-Carpena, P.; Lopez-Escamez, J.A. Rare Deletions or Large Duplications Contribute to Genetic Variation in Patients with Severe Tinnitus and Meniere Disease. Genes 2024, 15, 22. https://doi.org/10.3390/genes15010022
Sponsorship
University of Sydney (K7013_B3413 Grant); Asociacion Sindrome de Meniere España (ASMES); Meniere’s Society, UK; European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme, grant agreement number: 848261; Andalusian Goverment (CECEU 2020, grant code: DOC_01677); Predoctoral grant from the Regional Ministry of Economic Transformation, Industry, Knowledge and Universities of Junta de Andalucía (grant number: PREDOC2021/00343); Sara Borrell postdoctoral Fellowship (ISCIII; grant code: CD20/00153); Andalusian Health Government (CSyF 2020 POSTDOC, grant code: RH-0150-2020); Swedish Research Council through grant agreement no. 2018-05973Abstract
Meniere disease (MD) is a debilitating disorder of the inner ear defined by sensorineural
hearing loss (SNHL) associated with episodes of vertigo and tinnitus. Severe tinnitus, which occurs
in around 1% of patients, is a multiallelic disorder associated with a burden of rare missense single
nucleotide variants in synaptic genes. Rare structural variants (SVs) may also contribute to MD and
severe tinnitus. In this study, we analyzed exome sequencing data from 310 MD Spanish patients and
selected 75 patients with severe tinnitus based on a Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI) score > 68.
Three rare deletions were identified in two unrelated individuals overlapping the ERBB3 gene in
the positions: NC_000012.12:g.56100028_56100172del, NC_000012.12:g.56100243_56101058del, and
NC_000012.12:g.56101359_56101526del. Moreover, an ultra-rare large duplication was found covering
the AP4M1, COPS6, MCM7, TAF6, MIR106B, MIR25, and MIR93 genes in another two patients in the
NC_000007.14:g.100089053_100112257dup region. All the coding genes exhibited expression in brain
and inner ear tissues. These results confirm the contribution of large SVs to severe tinnitus in MD
and pinpoint new candidate genes to get a better molecular understanding of the disease.