Bosch Jason, Noubiap Jean Jacques N, Dandara Collet, Makubalo Nomlindo, Wright Galen, Entfellner Jean-Baka Domelevo, Tiffin Nicki, Wonkam Ambroise
1 Division of Human Genetics, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town , Cape Town, South Africa .
OMICS. 2014 Nov;18(11):705-10. doi: 10.1089/omi.2014.0063. Epub 2014 Aug 27.
Mutations in the GJB2 gene, encoding connexin 26, could account for 50% of congenital, nonsyndromic, recessive deafness cases in some Caucasian/Asian populations. There is a scarcity of published data in sub-Saharan Africans. We Sanger sequenced the coding region of the GJB2 gene in 205 Cameroonian and Xhosa South Africans with congenital, nonsyndromic deafness; and performed bioinformatic analysis of variations in the GJB2 gene, incorporating data from the 1000 Genomes Project. Amongst Cameroonian patients, 26.1% were familial. The majority of patients (70%) suffered from sensorineural hearing loss. Ten GJB2 genetic variants were detected by sequencing. A previously reported pathogenic mutation, g.3741_3743delTTC (p.F142del), and a putative pathogenic mutation, g.3816G>A (p.V167M), were identified in single heterozygous samples. Amongst eight the remaining variants, two novel variants, g.3318-41G>A and g.3332G>A, were reported. There were no statistically significant differences in allele frequencies between cases and controls. Principal Components Analyses differentiated between Africans, Asians, and Europeans, but only explained 40% of the variation. The present study is the first to compare African GJB2 sequences with the data from the 1000 Genomes Project and have revealed the low variation between population groups. This finding has emphasized the hypothesis that the prevalence of mutations in GJB2 in nonsyndromic deafness amongst European and Asian populations is due to founder effects arising after these individuals migrated out of Africa, and not to a putative "protective" variant in the genomic structure of GJB2 in Africans. Our results confirm that mutations in GJB2 are not associated with nonsyndromic deafness in Africans.
编码连接蛋白26的GJB2基因突变,在一些高加索/亚洲人群中,可导致50%的先天性、非综合征性、隐性耳聋病例。撒哈拉以南非洲人的相关已发表数据较少。我们对205名患有先天性、非综合征性耳聋的喀麦隆人和南非科萨人进行了GJB2基因编码区的桑格测序;并结合来自千人基因组计划的数据,对GJB2基因变异进行了生物信息学分析。在喀麦隆患者中,26.1%为家族性病例。大多数患者(70%)患有感音神经性听力损失。通过测序检测到10个GJB2基因变异。在单杂合样本中鉴定出一个先前报道的致病突变g.3741_3743delTTC(p.F142del)和一个推定的致病突变g.3816G>A(p.V167M)。在其余8个变异中,报道了2个新变异g.3318 - 41G>A和g.3332G>A。病例组和对照组之间的等位基因频率没有统计学上的显著差异。主成分分析区分了非洲人、亚洲人和欧洲人,但仅解释了40%的变异。本研究首次将非洲GJB2序列与千人基因组计划的数据进行比较,揭示了不同人群组之间变异较低。这一发现强调了这样一种假设,即欧洲和亚洲人群中非综合征性耳聋中GJB2基因突变的流行,是由于这些个体从非洲迁出后产生的奠基者效应,而非非洲人GJB2基因组结构中假定的“保护性”变异。我们的结果证实,GJB2基因突变与非洲人的非综合征性耳聋无关。