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Big deletions or insertions affecting connexin genes causing deafness
Lerer et al, 2001 described the presence of a
deletion of at least 140 Kb located upstream to the GJB2 gene and affecting the
first exon of GJB6. This mutation is found in 7 patients from 4 independent
Ashkenazi Jewish families, in trans with a mutation in the GJB2 gene, and it
was not identified in 100 control subjects of the same origin.. The authors
suggest that the deletion is a recessive mutation causing hearing loss in
individuals that are double heterozygous for the deletion and a mutation in the
GJB2 gene, either due to a digenic mode of inheritance or because the deletion
abolishes control elements that are important in the expression of GJB2.
Pallares-Ruiz et al. 2002 have also described a deletion
located 5" of the GJB6 gene, which probably is the same mutation, identified in
several patients with French or Spanish origins, either in the homozygous state
(one case) or in trans with a mutation in the GJB2 gene. The cloning of this
mutation showed that it is the same one as described by del Castillo et al.
2002 (see below).
del Castillo et al, 2002 have identified and completely
characterized a deletion that expands 342 kb and affects GJB6 but not the GJB2
gene. They have identified the deletion in both the homozygous state and in
heterozygosity with mutations in GJB2.
They have also developed a specific diagnostic test for this mutation, which is
the second most frequent mutation
causing prelingual deafness in the Spanish population. The data reported
strongly suggest that DFNB1 could be due to either monogenic or digenic
mutations in GJB2 and GJB6. It remains to be seen if this
deletion,del(GJB6-D13S1830), is the same as the two previously reported deletions
affecting GJB2.