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© Research
Publication : Nature Genetics

A mutation in OTOF, encoding otoferlin, a FER-1-like protein, causes DFNB9, a nonsyndromic form of deafness

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Nature Genetics - 01 Apr 1999

Shin'Ichiro Yasunaga, M'Hamed Grati, Martine Cohen-Salmon, Aziz El-Amraoui, Mirna Mustapha, Nabiha Salem, Elie El-Zir, Jacques Loiselet, Christine Petit

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 10192385

Link to HAL – pasteur-04036444

Link to DOI – 10.1038/7693

Nature Genetics, 1999, 21 (4), pp.363-369. ⟨10.1038/7693⟩

Using a candidate gene approach, we identified a novel human gene, OTOF, underlying an autosomal recessive, nonsyndromic prelingual deafness, DFNB9. The same nonsense mutation was detected in four unrelated affected families of Lebanese origin. OTOF is the second member of a mammalian gene family related to Caenorhabditis elegans fer-1. It encodes a predicted cytosolic protein (of 1,230 aa) with three C2 domains and a single carboxy-terminal transmembrane domain. The sequence homologies and predicted structure of otoferlin, the protein encoded by OTOF, suggest its involvement in vesicle membrane fusion. In the inner ear, the expression of the orthologous mouse gene, mainly in the sensory hair cells, indicates that such a role could apply to synaptic vesicles.