Temperature-Sensitive Auditory Neuropathy: Report of a Novel Variant of OTOF Gene and Review of Current Literature.
Francesca ForliSilvia CapobiancoStefano BerrettiniLuca BruschiniSilvia RomanoAntonella FogliVeronica BertiniFrancesco LazzeriniPublished in: Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania) (2023)
Background and objectives : Otoferlin is a multi-C2 domain protein implicated in neurotransmitter-containing vesicle release and replenishment of the cochlear inner hair cell (IHC) synapses. Mutations in the OTOF gene have been associated with two different clinical phenotypes: a prelingual severe-to-profound sensorineural hearing loss (ANSD-DFNB9); and the peculiar temperature-sensitive auditory neuropathy (TS-ANSD), characterized by a baseline mild-to-moderate hearing threshold that worsens to severe-to-profound when the body temperature rises that returns to a baseline a few hours after the temperature has fallen again. The latter clinical phenotype has been described only with a few OTOF variants with an autosomal recessive biallelic pattern of inheritance. Case report: A 7-year-old boy presented a picture compatible with TS-ANSD exacerbated by febrile states or physical exercise with mild-to-moderate hearing loss at low and medium frequencies and a decrease in speech discrimination that worsened with an unfavorable speech-to-noise ratio. Otoacoustic emissions (OAEs) were present whereas auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) evoked by a click or tone-burst were generally absent. No inner ear malformations were described from the CT scan or MRI. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) of the known deafness genes and multi-phasic bioinformatic analyses of the data detected in OTOF a c.2521G>A missense variant and the deletion of 7.4 Kb, which was confirmed by array-comparative genomic hybridization (array-CGH). The proband's parents, who were asymptomatic, were tested by Sanger sequencing and the father presented the c.2521G>A missense variant. Conclusions : The picture presented by the patient was compatible with OTOF-induced TS-ANSD. OTOF has been generally associated with an autosomal recessive biallelic pattern of inheritance; in this clinical report, two pathogenic variants never previously associated with TS-ANSD were described.
Keyphrases
- hearing loss
- intellectual disability
- copy number
- mitochondrial dna
- case report
- autism spectrum disorder
- genome wide
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- single cell
- contrast enhanced
- early onset
- systematic review
- working memory
- genome wide identification
- air pollution
- stem cells
- gene expression
- drug induced
- high throughput
- high density
- image quality
- mass spectrometry
- magnetic resonance
- small molecule
- heavy metals
- artificial intelligence
- single molecule
- genome wide analysis
- chemotherapy induced