4.6 Review

Hearing loss in Africa: current genetic profile

Journal

HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 141, Issue 3-4, Pages 505-517

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00439-021-02376-y

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. World Bank African Centres of Excellence grant [ACE02-WACCBIP: Awandare]
  2. DELTAS Africa grant [DEL-15-007: Awandare]
  3. African Academy of Sciences (AAS)'s Alliance for Accelerating Excellence in Science in Africa (AESA)
  4. New Partnership for Africa's Development Planning and Coordinating Agency (NEPAD Agency)
  5. Wellcome Trust [107755/Z/15/Z]
  6. UK government
  7. NIH, USA [U01-HG-009716]
  8. African Academy of Science/Wellcome Trust [H3A/18/001]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study systematically reviewed the genetic profile of hearing impairment in Africa, with most articles coming from North Africa and fewer reports from sub-Saharan Africa. The GJB2 gene was the most investigated, with varying founder variants reported in different African countries. Targeted gene sequencing was the most common method used in the studies reviewed.
Hearing impairment (HI) is highly heterogeneous with over 123 associated genes reported to date, mostly from studies among Europeans and Asians. Here, we performed a systematic review of literature on the genetic profile of HI in Africa. The study protocol was registered on PROSPERO, International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews with the registration number CRD42021240852. Literature search was conducted on PubMed, Scopus, Africa-Wide Information, and Web of Science databases. A total of 89 full-text records was selected and retrieved for data extraction and analyses. We found reports from only 17/54 (31.5%) African countries. The majority (61/89; 68.5%) of articles were from North Africa, with few reports found from sub-Saharan Africa. The most common method used in these publications was targeted gene sequencing (n = 66/111; 59.5%), and only 13.5% (n = 15/111) used whole-exome sequencing. More than half of the studies were performed in families segregating HI (n = 51/89). GJB2 was the most investigated gene, with GJB2: p.(R143W) founder variant only reported in Ghana, while GJB2: c.35delG was common in North African countries. Variants in MYO15A were the second frequently reported in both North and Central Africa, followed by ATP6V1B1 only reported from North Africa. Usher syndrome was the main syndromic HI molecularly investigated, with variants in five genes reported: USH2A, USH1G, USH1C, MYO7A, and PCDH15. MYO7A: p.(P1780S) founder variant was reported as the common Usher syndrome variant among Black South Africans. This review provides the most comprehensive data on HI gene variants in the largely under-investigated African populations. Future exomes studies particularly in multiplex families will likely provide opportunities for the discovery of the next sets of novel HI genes, and well as unreported variants in known genes to further our understanding of HI pathobiology, globally.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available