<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<xml>
 <records>
  <record>
   <ref-type name="Journal Article">17</ref-type>
   <contributors>
    <authors>
     <author>Barashkov, Nikolay A.</author>
     <author>Pshennikova, Vera G.</author>
     <author>Posukh, Olga L.</author>
     <author>Teryutin, Fedor M.</author>
     <author>Solovyev, Aisen V.</author>
     <author>Klarov, Leonid A.</author>
     <author>Romanov, Georgii P.</author>
     <author>Gotovtsev, Nyurgun N.</author>
     <author>Kozhevnikov, Andrey A.</author>
     <author>Kirillina, Elena V.</author>
     <author>Sidorova, Oksana G.</author>
     <author>Vasilyevа, Lena M.</author>
     <author>Fedotova, Elvira E.</author>
     <author>Morozov, Igor V.</author>
     <author>Bondar, Alexander A.</author>
     <author>Solovyevа, Natalya A.</author>
     <author>Kononova, Sardana K.</author>
     <author>Rafailov, Adyum M.</author>
     <author>Sazonov, Nikolay N.</author>
     <author>Alekseev, Anatoliy N.</author>
     <author>Tomsky, Mikhail I.</author>
     <author>Dzhemileva, Lilya U.</author>
     <author>Khusnutdinova, Elza K.</author>
     <author>Fedorova, Sardana A.</author>
    </authors>
   </contributors>
   <titles>
    <title></title>
   </titles>
   <dates>
    <year>2016</year>
    <pub-dates>
     <date>2018-03-03</date>
    </pub-dates>
   </dates>
   <doi>10.1371/journal.pone.0156300</doi>
   <abstract>Pathogenic variants in the GJB2 gene, encoding connexin 26, are known to be a major&#13;
cause of hearing impairment (HI). More than 300 allelic variants have been identified in the&#13;
GJB2 gene. Spectrum and allelic frequencies of the GJB2 gene vary significantly among different&#13;
ethnic groups worldwide. Until now, the spectrum and frequency of the pathogenic&#13;
variants in exon 1, exon 2 and the flanking intronic regions of the GJB2 gene have not been&#13;
described thoroughly in the Sakha Republic (Yakutia), which is located in a subarctic regionin Russia. The complete sequencing of the non-coding and coding regions of the GJB2&#13;
gene was performed in 393 patients with HI (Yakuts—296, Russians—51, mixed and other&#13;
ethnicities—46) and in 187 normal hearing individuals of Yakut (n = 107) and Russian (n =&#13;
80) populations. In the total sample (n = 580), we revealed 12 allelic variants of the GJB2&#13;
gene, 8 of which were recessive pathogenic variants. Ten genotypes with biallelic recessive&#13;
pathogenic variants in the GJB2 gene (in a homozygous or a compound heterozygous&#13;
state) were found in 192 out of 393 patients (48.85%). We found that the most frequent&#13;
GJB2 pathogenic variant in the Yakut patients was c.-23+1G&gt;A (51.82%) and that the second&#13;
most frequent was c.109G&gt;A (2.37%), followed by c.35delG (1.64%). Pathogenic variants&#13;
с.35delG (22.34%), c.-23+1G&gt;A (5.31%), and c.313_326del14 (2.12%) were found to&#13;
be the most frequent among the Russian patients. The carrier frequencies of the c.-23&#13;
+1G&gt;A and с.109G&gt;A pathogenic variants in the Yakut control group were 10.20% and&#13;
2.80%, respectively. The carrier frequencies of с.35delG and c.101T&gt;C were identical&#13;
(2.5%) in the Russian control group. We found that the contribution of the GJB2 gene pathogenic&#13;
variants in HI in the population of the Sakha Republic (48.85%) was the highest&#13;
among all of the previously studied regions of Asia. We suggest that extensive accumulation&#13;
of the c.-23+1G&gt;A pathogenic variant in the indigenous Yakut population (92.20% of all&#13;
mutant chromosomes in patients) and an extremely high (10.20%) carrier frequency in the&#13;
control group may indicate a possible selective advantage for the c.-23+1G&gt;A carriers living&#13;
in subarctic climate.</abstract>
   <urls>
    <web-urls>
     <url>https://repo.bashgmu.ru/publication/1033</url>
    </web-urls>
    <pdf-urls>
     <url>https://repo.bashgmu.ru/files/1180</url>
    </pdf-urls>
   </urls>
  </record>
 </records>
</xml>
