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Variant c.2158-2A>G in MANBA is an important and frequent cause of hereditary hearing loss and beta-mannosidosis among the Czech and Slovak Roma population- evidence for a new ethnic-specific variant

Dana Šafka Brožková, Lukáš Varga, Anna Uhrová Mészárosová, Zuzana Slobodová, Martina Škopková, Andrea Šoltýsová, Andrej Ficek, Ján Jenčík, Jana Laštůvková, Daniela Gašperíková, Pavel Seeman

2020Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Roma are a European ethnic minority threatened by several recessive diseases. Variants in MANBA cause a rare lysosomal storage disorder named beta-mannosidosis whose clinical manifestation includes deafness and mental retardation. Since 1986, only 23 patients with beta-mannosidosis and biallelic MANBA variants have been described worldwide. RESULTS: We now report on further 10 beta-mannosidosis patients of Roma origin from eight families in the Czech and Slovak Republics with hearing loss, mental retardation and homozygous pathogenic variants in MANBA. MANBA variant c.2158-2A>G screening among 345 anonymized normal hearing controls from Roma populations revealed a carrier/heterozygote frequency of 3.77%. This is about 925 times higher than the frequency of this variant in the gnomAD public database and classifies the c.2158-2A>G variant as a prevalent, ethnic-specific variant causing hearing loss and mental retardation in a homozygous state. The frequency of heterozygotes/carriers is similar to another pathogenic variant c.71G>A (p.W24*) in GJB2, regarded as the most frequent variant causing deafness in Roma populations. CONLCUSION: Beta-mannosidosis, due to a homozygous c.2158-2A>G MANBA variant, is an important and previously unknown cause of hearing loss and mental retardation among Central European Roma.

Topics & Concepts

Hearing lossHeterozygote advantageCompound heterozygosityPopulationMedicineGeneticsPediatricsAudiologyBiologyAlleleGeneEnvironmental healthLysosomal Storage Disorders ResearchHearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, GeneticsCalcium signaling and nucleotide metabolism