Extreme Phenotypic Variability of ACTG1-Related Disorders in Hearing Loss

Adv Genet (Hoboken). 2024 Dec 5;5(4):2400040. doi: 10.1002/ggn2.202400040. eCollection 2024 Dec.

Abstract

Hearing loss is the most common sensory defect in humans, affecting normal communication. In most cases, hearing loss is a multifactorial disorder caused by both genetic and environmental factors, but single-gene mutations can lead to syndromic or non-syndromic hearing loss. Monoallelic variants in ACTG1, coding for gamma (γ)-actin, are associated with classical Baraitser-Winter Syndrome type 2 (BRWS2, nonsyndromic deafness, and a variety of clinical presentations not fitting the original BRWS2 description or nonsyndromic deafness. Here two unrelated patients with ACTG1 variants are reported, having severe hearing loss as a common phenotype but with different clinical presentations, supporting the extreme variability of ACTG1-related disorders.

Keywords: ACTG1; hearing loss.