10.3389/fgene.2019.00841.s004 Samuel M. Adadey Samuel M. Adadey Noluthando Manyisa Noluthando Manyisa Khuthala Mnika Khuthala Mnika Carmen de Kock Carmen de Kock Victoria Nembaware Victoria Nembaware Osbourne Quaye Osbourne Quaye Geoffrey K. Amedofu Geoffrey K. Amedofu Gordon A. Awandare Gordon A. Awandare Ambroise Wonkam Ambroise Wonkam Table_2_GJB2 and GJB6 Mutations in Non-Syndromic Childhood Hearing Impairment in Ghana.docx Frontiers 2019 hearing impairment genetics GJB2 and GJB6 Ghana Africa 2019-11-26 14:41:37 Dataset https://frontiersin.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_2_GJB2_and_GJB6_Mutations_in_Non-Syndromic_Childhood_Hearing_Impairment_in_Ghana_docx/11208404 <p>Our study aimed to investigate GJB2 (connexin 26) and GJB6 (connexin 30) mutations associated with non-syndromic childhood hearing impairment (HI) as well as the environmental causes of HI in Ghana. Medical reports of 1,104 students attending schools for the deaf were analyzed. Families segregating HI, as well as isolated cases of HI of putative genetic origin were recruited. DNA was extracted from peripheral blood followed by Sanger sequencing of the entire coding region of GJB2. Multiplex PCR and Sanger sequencing were used to analyze the prevalence of GJB6-D3S1830 deletion. Ninety-seven families segregating HI were identified, with 235 affected individuals; and a total of 166 isolated cases of putative genetic causes, were sampled from 11 schools for the deaf in Ghana. The environmental factors, particularly meningitis, remain a major cause of HI impairment in Ghana. The male/female ratio was 1.49. Only 59.6% of the patients had their first comprehensive HI test between 6 to 11 years of age. Nearly all the participants had sensorineural HI (99.5%; n = 639). The majority had pre-lingual HI (68.3%, n = 754), of which 92.8% were congenital. Pedigree analysis suggested autosomal recessive inheritance in 96.9% of the familial cases. GJB2-R143W mutation, previously reported as founder a mutation in Ghana accounted for 25.9% (21/81) in the homozygous state in familial cases, and in 7.9% (11/140) of non-familial non-syndromic congenital HI cases, of putative genetic origin. In a control population without HI, we found a prevalent of GJB2-R143W carriers of 1.4% (2/145), in the heterozygous state. No GJB6-D3S1830 deletion was identified in any of the HI patients. GJB2-R143W mutation accounted for over a quarter of familial non-syndromic HI in Ghana and should be investigated in clinical practice. The large connexin 30 gene deletion (GJB6-D3S1830 deletion) does not account for of congenital non-syndromic HI in Ghana. There is a need to employ next generation sequencing approaches and functional genomics studies to identify the other genes involved in most families and isolated cases of HI in Ghana.</p>