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a Genetics Department,
Boys Town National Research Hospital, 555 N 30th Street, Omaha, NE
68131 USA, b Department of Audiology,
Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Götebörg, Sweden, c Department of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology,
University Hospital, Nijmegan, The Netherlands, d Department
of Ophthalmology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine,
Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Correspondence to: Dr Kimberling, kimber{at}boystown.org
Revised version received 10 September 1999;
Accepted for publication 1
December 1999
Usher syndrome is a group of autosomal recessive disorders that
includes retinitis pigmentosa (RP) with hearing loss. Usher syndrome
type II is defined as moderate to severe hearing loss with RP. The
USH2A gene at 1q41 has been isolated and
characterised. In 1993, a large Usher II family affected with a mild
form of RP was found to be unlinked to 1q41 markers. Subsequent linkage studies of families in our Usher series identified several type II
families unlinked to USH2A and
USH3 on 3q25. After a second unlinked family
with many affected members and a mild retinal phenotype was discovered,
a genome search using these two large families showed another Usher II
locus on 5q (two point lod = 3.1 at D5S484). To date, we have
identified nine unrelated 5q linked families (maximum combined
multipoint lod = 5.86) as well as three Usher II families that show no
significant linkage to any known Usher loci. Haplotype analysis of 5q
markers indicates that the new locus is flanked by D5S428 and D5S433.
Review of ophthalmological data suggests that RP symptoms are milder in 5q linked families; the RP is often not diagnosed until patients near
their third decade. Enamel hypoplasia and severe, very early onset RP
were observed in two of the three unlinked families; dental anomalies
have not been previously described as a feature of Usher type II.
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