There are hundreds of rare syndromic diseases involving hearing loss, many of which are not targeted for clinical genetic testing. We systematically explored the genetic causes of undiagnosed syndromic hearing loss using a combination of whole exome sequencing (WES) and a phenotype similarity search system called PubCaseFinder. Fifty-five families with syndromic hearing loss of unknown cause were analyzed using WES after prescreening of several deafness genes depending on patient clinical features. Causative genes were identified in 22 families, including both established genes associated with syndromic hearing loss (PTPN11, CHD7, KARS1, OPA1, DLX5, MITF, SOX10, MYO7A, and USH2A) and those associated with nonsyndromic hearing loss (STRC, EYA4, and KCNQ4). Association of a DLX5 variant with incomplete partition type I (IP-I) anomaly of the inner ear was identified in a patient with cleft lip and palate and acetabular dysplasia. The study identified COL1A1, CFAP52, and NSD1 as causative genes through phenotype similarity search or by analogy. ZBTB10 was proposed as a novel candidate gene for syndromic hearing loss with IP-I. A mouse model with homozygous Zbtb10 frameshift variant resulted in embryonic lethality, suggesting the importance of this gene for early embryonic development. Our data highlight a wide spectrum of rare causative genes in patients with syndromic hearing loss, and demonstrate that WES analysis combined with phenotype similarity search is a valuable approach for clinical genetic testing of undiagnosed disease.
© 2025. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.