Expansion of Molecular and Clinical Aspects of EPS8L2 (DFNB106)-Associated Hearing Loss Emphasizes a Potential Therapeutic Window.
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| Abstract | EPS8L2, encoding EPS8 signaling adaptor L2 protein, is critical for stereocilia maintenance in cochlear hair cells. Four previously published families have replicated autosomal recessive non-syndromic hearing loss (DFNB106), yet the mutational and clinical spectrum remains poorly described. This study expands the mutational and clinical spectrum of EPS8L2-associated hearing impairment by identifying five additional individuals in four families, more than doubling the number of reported cases to date, while going deeper into clinical aspects. These include two frameshift variants c.818_827dup, p.(Ala279Glyfs*36) and c.1430dup, p.(Val478Serfs*25), the first nonsense variant c.1878C > A, p.(Tyr626Ter), and the first missense variant with a spliceogenic effect c.767C > G, p.(Thr256Arg). Functional analysis confirmed that the c.767C > G variant causes exon 9 skipping, leading to a frameshift r.701_768del, p.(Gly234Alafs*55). A shared 4.17 Mb homozygous region among two unrelated Iranian families with this variant suggested a founder effect. These individuals uniquely showed U-shaped audiograms as a new association of more severe middle frequency hearing loss. Clinically, affected individuals presented moderate to moderately severe hearing loss that was mostly progressive, with an onset starting between the prelingual stage, extending postlingually. A younger sibling of the first European proband diagnosed with DFNB106 passed newborn hearing screening but was identified with compound heterozygous variants, underscoring the importance of early genetic testing. The progressive nature of EPS8L2-related hearing loss is unusual for recessive non-syndromic forms and highlights the need for early monitoring and intervention. This work emphasizes the need for early molecular diagnosis and long-term clinical follow-up, while describing the natural history of EPS8L2 that will be important for future therapeutic development. |
| Year of Publication | 2026
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| Journal | Molecular neurobiology
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| Volume | 63
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| Issue | 1
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| Pages | 354
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| Date Published | 01/2026
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| ISSN | 1559-1182
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| DOI | 10.1007/s12035-025-05615-9
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| PubMed ID | 41514136
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