Nonsyndromic hearing loss (NSHL) is the most common type of hearing impairment in the elderly. Environmental and hereditary factors play an etiologic role, although the relative contribution of each is unknown. To date, 39 NSHL genes have been localized. Twelve produce autosomal dominant hearing loss, most frequently postlingual in onset and progressive in nature. We have ascertained a large, multigenerational family in which a gene for autosomal dominant NSHL is segregating. Affected individuals experience progressive hearing loss beginning in the 2d-4th decades, eventually making the use of amplification mandatory. A novel locus, DFNA13, was identified on chromosome 6p; the disease gene maps to a 4-cM interval flanked by D6S1663 and D6S1691, with a maximum two-point LOD score of 6.409 at D6S299.
CITATION STYLE
Brown, M. R., Tomek, M. S., Van Laer, L., Smith, S., Kenyon, J. B., Van Camp, G., & Smith, R. J. H. (1997). A novel locus for autosomal dominant nonsyndromic hearing loss, DFNA13, maps to chromosome 6p. American Journal of Human Genetics, 61(4), 924–927. https://doi.org/10.1086/514892
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