Objective: The objective of this study was to characterize the temporal bone phenotype associated with a mutation of GJB2 (encoding connexin 26).
Study design: The authors conducted correlative clinical, molecular genetic, and postmortem histopathologic analysis.
Methods: The study subject was a male infant with keratitis-ichthyosis-deafness (KID) syndrome. We performed a nucleotide sequence analysis of GJB2 and a histopathologic analysis of the temporal bones.
Results: The subject was heterozygous for G45E, a previously reported KID syndrome mutation of GJB2. The primary inner ear abnormality was dysplasia of the cochlear and saccular neuroepithelium.
Conclusions: GJB2 mutations can cause deafness in KID syndrome, and possibly in other GJB2 mutant phenotypes, by disrupting cochlear differentiation.