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Whole-exome sequencing identifies two novel mutations in KCNQ4 in individuals with nonsyndromic hearing loss.

Jinsei JungHyun Been ChoiYoung Ik KohJohn Hoon RimHye Ji ChoiSung Huhn KimJae Hyun LeeJieun AnAmi KimJoon Suk LeeSun Young JooSeyoung YuJae Young ChoiTong Mook KangHeon Yung Gee
Published in: Scientific reports (2018)
Mutations in potassium voltage-gated channel subfamily Q member 4 (KCNQ4) are etiologically linked to a type of nonsyndromic hearing loss, deafness nonsyndromic autosomal dominant 2 (DFNA2). We performed whole-exome sequencing for 98 families with hearing loss and found mutations in KCNQ4 in five families. In this study, we characterized two novel mutations in KCNQ4: a missense mutation (c.796G>T; p.Asp266Tyr) and an in-frame deletion mutation (c.259_267del; p.Val87_Asn89del). p.Asp266Tyr located in the channel pore region resulted in early onset and moderate hearing loss, whereas p.Val87_Asn89del located in the N-terminal cytoplasmic region resulted in late onset and high frequency-specific hearing loss. When heterologously expressed in HEK 293 T cells, both mutant proteins did not show defects in protein trafficking to the plasma membrane or in interactions with wild-type (WT) KCNQ4 channels. Patch-clamp analysis demonstrated that both p.Asp266Tyr and p.Val87_Asn89del mutant channels lost conductance and were completely unresponsive to KCNQ activators, such as retigabine, zinc pyrithione, and ML213. Channels assembled from WT-p.Asp266Tyr concatemers, like those from WT-WT concatemers, exhibited conductance and responsiveness to KCNQ activators. However, channels assembled from WT-p.Val87_Asn89del concatemers showed impaired conductance, suggesting that p.Val87_Asn89del caused complete loss-of-function with a strong dominant-negative effect on functional WT channels. Therefore, the main pathological mechanism may be related to loss of K+ channel activity, not defects in trafficking.
Keyphrases
  • hearing loss
  • early onset
  • late onset
  • wild type
  • high frequency
  • transcranial magnetic stimulation
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • intellectual disability
  • binding protein
  • autism spectrum disorder