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GWAS Study

Gene burden analysis identifies genes associated with increased risk and severity of adult-onset hearing loss in a diverse hospital-based cohort.

Hui D, Mehrabi S, Quimby AE et al.

36656851 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
36507 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

HD
Hui D
MS
Mehrabi S
QA
Quimby AE
CT
Chen T
CS
Chen S
PJ
Park J
LB
Li B
RM
Ruckenstein MJ
RD
Rader DJ
RM
Ritchie MD
BJ
Brant JA
ED
Epstein DJ
MI
Mathieson I
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Loss or absence of hearing is common at both extremes of human lifespan, in the forms of congenital deafness and age-related hearing loss. While these are often studied separately, there is increasing evidence that their genetic basis is at least partially overlapping. In particular, both common and rare variants in genes associated with monogenic forms of hearing loss also contribute to the more polygenic basis of age-related hearing loss. Here, we directly test this model in the Penn Medicine BioBank-a healthcare system cohort of around 40,000 individuals with linked genetic and electronic health record data. We show that increased burden of predicted deleterious variants in Mendelian hearing loss genes is associated with increased risk and severity of adult-onset hearing loss. As a specific example, we identify one gene-TCOF1, responsible for a syndromic form of congenital hearing loss-in which deleterious variants are also associated with adult-onset hearing loss. We also identify four additional novel candidate genes (COL5A1, HMMR, RAPGEF3, and NNT) in which rare variant burden may be associated with hearing loss. Our results confirm that rare variants in Mendelian hearing loss genes contribute to polygenic risk of hearing loss, and emphasize the utility of healthcare system cohorts to study common complex traits and diseases.

859 European ancestry cases, 26,292 European ancestry controls, 251 African American or Afro-Caribbean cases, 9,105 African American or Afro-Caribbean controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

36507
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European, African American or Afro-Caribbean
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

AI-Generated Summary

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