Entry - #602459 - DEAFNESS, AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT 15; DFNA15 - OMIM
# 602459

DEAFNESS, AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT 15; DFNA15


Phenotype-Gene Relationships

Location Phenotype Phenotype
MIM number
Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
5q32 Deafness, autosomal dominant 15 602459 AD 3 POU4F3 602460
Clinical Synopsis
 
Phenotypic Series
 

INHERITANCE
- Autosomal dominant
HEAD & NECK
Ears
- Hearing loss, postlingual sensorineural
- Downward sloping or flat audiogram
MISCELLANEOUS
- Onset between the second and sixth decades
- Intrafamilial variability
MOLECULAR BASIS
- Caused by mutation in the class 4 POU domain transcription factor 3 gene (POU4F3, 602460.0001)
Deafness, autosomal dominant - PS124900 - 76 Entries
Location Phenotype Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Phenotype
MIM number
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
1p36.12 Deafness, autosomal dominant 85 AD 3 620227 USP48 617445
1p34.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 2B AD 3 612644 GJB3 603324
1p34.3 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 88 AD 3 620283 EPHA10 611123
1p34.2 Deafness, autosomal dominant 2A AD 3 600101 KCNQ4 603537
1p21.1 Deafness, autosomal dominant 37 AD 3 618533 COL11A1 120280
1q21-q23 Deafness, autosomal dominant 49 AD 2 608372 DFNA49 608372
1q21.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 87 AD 3 620281 PI4KB 602758
1q23.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 7 AD 3 601412 LMX1A 600298
1q44 Deafness, autosomal dominant 34, with or without inflammation AD 3 617772 NLRP3 606416
2p21-p12 Deafness, autosomal dominant 58 AD 4 615654 DFNA58 615654
2p12 Deafness, autosomal dominant 43 AD 2 608394 DFNA43 608394
2p11.2 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 81 AD 3 619500 ELMOD3 615427
2q23-q24.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 16 AD 2 603964 DFNA16 603964
3p25.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 82 AD 3 619804 ATP2B2 108733
3q21.3 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 70 AD 3 616968 MCM2 116945
3q22 Deafness, autosomal dominant 18 AD 2 606012 DFNA18 606012
3q23 Deafness, autosomal dominant 76 AD 3 618787 PLS1 602734
3q28 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 44 AD 3 607453 CCDC50 611051
4p16.1 Deafness, autosomal dominant 6/14/38 AD 3 600965 WFS1 606201
4q12 Deafness, autosomal dominant 27 AD 3 612431 REST 600571
4q21.22 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 79 AD 3 619086 SCD5 608370
4q22.2 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 89 AD 3 620284 ATOH1 601461
4q35-qter Deafness, autosomal dominant 24 AD 2 606282 DFNA24 606282
5q13.2 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 83 AD 3 619808 MAP1B 157129
5q23.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 78 AD 3 619081 SLC12A2 600840
5q31.1-q32 Deafness, autosomal dominant 52 AD 2 607683 DFNA52 607683
5q31 Deafness, autosomal dominant 54 AD 2 615649 DFNA54 615649
5q31.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 1, with or without thrombocytopenia AD 3 124900 DIAPH1 602121
5q32 Deafness, autosomal dominant 15 AD 3 602459 POU4F3 602460
6p22.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 21 AD 3 607017 RIPOR2 611410
6p21.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 31 AD 2 608645 DFNA31 608645
6p21.33 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 72 AD 3 617606 SLC44A4 606107
6p21.32 Deafness, autosomal dominant 13 AD 3 601868 COL11A2 120290
6q14.1 Deafness, autosomal dominant 22 AD 3 606346 MYO6 600970
6q14.1 Deafness, autosomal dominant 22, with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy AD 3 606346 MYO6 600970
6q21 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 66 AD 3 616969 CD164 603356
6q23.2 Deafness, autosomal dominant 10 AD 3 601316 EYA4 603550
7p15.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 5 AD 3 600994 GSDME 608798
7p14.3 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 74 AD 3 618140 PDE1C 602987
7q22.1 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 75 AD 3 618778 TRRAP 603015
7q32.2 Deafness, autosomal dominant 50 AD 3 613074 MIR96 611606
8q22.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 28 AD 3 608641 GRHL2 608576
9p22-p21 Deafness, autosomal dominant 47 AD 2 608652 DFNA47 608652
9q21.11 Deafness, autosomal dominant 51 AD 4 613558 DFNA51 613558
9q21.13 Deafness, autosomal dominant 36 AD 3 606705 TMC1 606706
9q33.1 Deafness, autosomal dominant 56 AD 3 615629 TNC 187380
10p12.1 Deafness, autosomal dominant 90 AD 3 620722 MYO3A 606808
11p14.2-q12.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 59 AD 2 612642 DFNA59 612642
11q13.5 Deafness, autosomal dominant 11 AD 3 601317 MYO7A 276903
11q23.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 8/12 AD 3 601543 TECTA 602574
12q13-q14 Deafness, autosomal dominant 48 AD 2 607841 DFNA48 607841
12q21.31 Deafness, autosomal dominant 73 AD 3 617663 PTPRQ 603317
12q21.32 Deafness, autosomal dominant 69, unilateral or asymmetric AD 3 616697 KITLG 184745
12q23.1 Deafness, autosomal dominant 25 AD 3 605583 SLC17A8 607557
12q24.31 Deafness, autosomal dominant 64 AD 3 614152 DIABLO 605219
12q24.33 Deafness, autosomal dominant 41 AD 3 608224 P2RX2 600844
13q12.11 Deafness, autosomal dominant 3A AD 3 601544 GJB2 121011
13q12.11 Deafness, autosomal dominant 3B AD 3 612643 GJB6 604418
13q34 Deafness, autosomal dominant 33 AD 2 614211 DFNA33 614211
13q34 Deafness, autosomal dominant 84 AD 3 619810 ATP11A 605868
14q11.2-q12 Deafness, autosomal dominant 53 AD 2 609965 DFNA53 609965
14q12 Deafness, autosomal dominant 9 AD 3 601369 COCH 603196
14q23.1 Deafness, autosomal dominant 23 AD 3 605192 SIX1 601205
15q21.2 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 71 AD 3 617605 DMXL2 612186
15q25-q26 Deafness, autosomal dominant 30 AD 2 606451 DFNA30 606451
15q25.2 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 68 AD 3 616707 HOMER2 604799
16p13.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 65 AD 3 616044 TBC1D24 613577
16p13.11 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 77 AD 3 618915 ABCC1 158343
16p12.2 Deafness, autosomal dominant 40 AD 3 616357 CRYM 123740
17q25.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 20/26 AD 3 604717 ACTG1 102560
18p11.32 ?Deafness, autosomal dominant 86 AD 3 620280 THOC1 606930
18q11.1-q11.2 Deafness, autosomal dominant 80 AD 3 619274 GREB1L 617782
19q13.31-q13.32 Deafness, autosomal dominant 4B AD 3 614614 CEACAM16 614591
19q13.33 Deafness, autosomal dominant 4A AD 3 600652 MYH14 608568
20q13.33 Deafness, autosomal dominant 67 AD 3 616340 OSBPL2 606731
22q12.3 Deafness, autosomal dominant 17 AD 3 603622 MYH9 160775

TEXT

A number sign (#) is used with this entry because of evidence that autosomal dominant deafness-15 (DFNA15) is caused by heterozygous mutation in the POU4F3 gene (602460) on chromosome 5q32.


Description

Autosomal dominant deafness-15 is a form of progressive nonsyndromic sensorineural hearing loss with postlingual onset between the second and sixth decades of life (summary by Kim et al., 2013).


Clinical Features

Vahava et al. (1998) studied progressive hearing loss in an Israeli Jewish family that traced its ancestry to Italy and to subsequent migrations through various North African and Middle Eastern countries, including Tunisia, Libya, and Egypt, with branches of the family now living in Israel, the United States, and Belgium. Five generations demonstrated autosomal dominant inheritance of progressive deafness. Earliest record of a hearing-impaired family member concerned an individual born in 1843 in Libya. He had 4 children, only 1 of whom was affected. Hearing loss in this kindred, referred to as family H, began between ages 18 and 30, with a moderate to severe defect in hearing by age 50.

Collin et al. (2008) reported a large Dutch family in which multiple members had hearing loss. The was large clinical variability in terms of age at onset, levels of progression, and shape of audiograms. For example, 1 patient reported subjective onset around puberty, whereas another had onset at 20 years of age.

Lee et al. (2010) reported a 44-year-old Korean woman with progressive sensorineural hearing loss beginning at age 20 years. Family history revealed affected family members spanning 4 generations.

Kim et al. (2013) reported a large 6-generation Korean family in which multiple individuals had postlingual onset of sensorineural hearing loss. The age at onset ranged from the early teens to late fifties, and no patients had additional syndromic features. Pure tone audiograms showed bilateral minimal to moderate sensorineural hearing loss with flat to gently downward-sloping audiograms.


Inheritance

The transmission pattern of DFNA15 in the families reported by Vahava et al. (1998) and Kim et al. (2013) was consistent with autosomal dominant inheritance.


Mapping

By linkage analysis of a large family with hearing loss, Vahava et al. (1998) identified a locus, termed DFNA15, on chromosome 5q31-q33. The candidate 25-cM region was bounded by D5S1979 and D5S422. Analysis of the maximum-likelihood genetic model for deafness in this family indicated a rare autosomal dominant allele with full penetrance by age 40 and 0.05 probability of deafness from other causes by age 40 (in other words, 5% phenocopies).


Molecular Genetics

In searching for candidate genes in the DFNA15-linked region, Vahava et al. (1998) noted that the class 4 POU domain transcription factor-3 gene (POU4F3) may lie on 5q, on the basis of the localization of mouse Pou4f3 and the homology of human chromosomes 5 and 18 with mouse chromosome 18. POU4F3 was considered an excellent candidate for a gene causing human deafness because targeted deletion of both alleles of Pou4f3 caused complete deafness in mice. To map POU4F3 more precisely, they synthesized primers for the human POU4F3 cDNA sequence and used these to amplify pools of the CEPH3 yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) library. In this way, YACs containing markers linked to deafness in family H were found, indicating that POU4F3 must lie within the DFNA15-linked region. Using primers designed to amplify and sequence the entire coding region, they found an 8-bp deletion (602460.0001) in exon 2 of the POU4F3 gene. The predicted result of this deletion was a frameshift beginning at codon 295 and a premature translation stop at position 299. Deletion was not found in the POU4F3 gene of 114 unrelated individuals of various North African and Middle Eastern Jewish ancestry selected to represent the contribution of various ethnic Jewish populations to family H.

In affected members of 2 unrelated Dutch families with autosomal dominant hearing loss, Collin et al. (2008) identified 2 different heterozygous mutations in the POU4F3 gene (602460.0002 and 602460.0003, respectively).

In a 44-year-old Korean woman with DFNA15, Lee et al. (2010) identified a heterozygous truncating mutation in the POU4F3 gene (602460.0005). In vitro expression studies showed that the mutant protein lost most of its nuclear localization as well as transcriptional activity. The proband was 1 of 42 unrelated Korean patients with autosomal dominant nonsyndromic hearing loss who were sequenced for POU4F3 mutations.

Using a combination of linkage analysis and whole-exome sequencing, Kim et al. (2013) identified a heterozygous missense mutation in the POU4F3 gene (R326K; 602460) in affected members of a large Korean family with DFNA15.


Animal Model

By comparing inner ear gene expression profiles of embryonic day 16.5 wildtype and Pou4f3-mutant deaf mice, Hertzano et al. (2004) identified the GFI1 gene (600871) as a target gene regulated by Pou4f3. Deficiency of Pou4f3 led to a reduction in Gfi1 expression levels, and the dynamics of Gfi1 mRNA abundance closely followed the pattern of expression for Pou4f3. Immunohistochemical and ultrastructural analyses revealed that loss of Gfi1 resulted in outer hair cell degeneration, which appeared comparable to that observed in Pou4f3 mutants. Hertzano et al. (2004) concluded that Gfi1 is the first downstream target of a hair cell-specific transcription factor, and they suggested that outer hair cell degeneration in Pou4f3 mutants may be largely or entirely a result of the loss of expression of Gfi1.


REFERENCES

  1. Collin, R. W. J., Chellappa, R., Pauw, R.-J., Vriend, G., Oostrik, J., van Drunen, W., Huygen, P. L., Admiraal, R., Hoefsloot, L. H., Cremers, F. P. M., Xiang, M., Cremers, C. W. R. J., Kremer, H. Missense mutations in POU4F3 cause autosomal dominant hearing impairment DFNA15 and affect subcellular localization and DNA binding. Hum. Mutat. 29: 545-554, 2008. [PubMed: 18228599, images, related citations] [Full Text]

  2. Hertzano, R., Montcouquiol, M., Rashi-Elkeles, S., Elkon, R., Yucel, R., Frankel, W. N., Rechavi, G., Moroy, T., Friedman, T. B., Kelley, M. W., Avraham, K. B. Transcription profiling of inner ears from Pou4f3(ddl/ddl) identifies Gfi1 as a target of the Pou4f3 deafness gene. Hum. Molec. Genet. 13: 2143-2153, 2004. [PubMed: 15254021, related citations] [Full Text]

  3. Kim, H.-J., Won, H.-H., Park, K.-J., Hong, S. H., Ki, C.-S., Cho, S. S., Venselaar, H., Vriend, G., Kim, J.-W. SNP linkage analysis and whole exome sequencing identify a novel POU4F3 mutation in autosomal dominant late-onset nonsyndromic hearing loss (DFNA15). PLos One 8: e79063, 2013. Note: Electronic Article. [PubMed: 24260153, images, related citations] [Full Text]

  4. Lee, H. K., Park, H.-J., Lee, K.-Y., Park, R., Kim, U.-K. A novel frameshift mutation of POU4F3 gene associated with autosomal dominant non-syndromic hearing loss. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 396: 626-630, 2010. Note: Erratum: Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 398: 790 only, 2010. [PubMed: 20434433, related citations] [Full Text]

  5. Vahava, O., Morell, R., Lynch, E. D., Weiss, S., Kagan, M. E., Ahituv, N., Morrow, J. E., Lee, M. K., Skvorak, A. B., Morton, C. C., Blumenfeld, A., Frydman, M., Friedman, T. B., King, M.-C., Avraham, K. B. Mutation in transcription factor POU4F3 associated with inherited progressive hearing loss in humans. Science 279: 1950-1954, 1998. [PubMed: 9506947, related citations] [Full Text]


Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 3/5/2014
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 1/8/2014
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 7/22/2008
George E. Tiller - updated : 3/26/2007
Creation Date:
Victor A. McKusick : 3/20/1998
carol : 05/12/2017
carol : 06/22/2016
mcolton : 5/7/2014
alopez : 3/12/2014
mcolton : 3/7/2014
ckniffin : 3/5/2014
carol : 1/17/2014
ckniffin : 1/8/2014
terry : 12/2/2008
wwang : 7/29/2008
ckniffin : 7/22/2008
wwang : 3/26/2007
kayiaros : 7/12/1999
dkim : 10/12/1998
alopez : 3/20/1998

# 602459

DEAFNESS, AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT 15; DFNA15


ORPHA: 90635;   DO: 0110546;  


Phenotype-Gene Relationships

Location Phenotype Phenotype
MIM number
Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
5q32 Deafness, autosomal dominant 15 602459 Autosomal dominant 3 POU4F3 602460

TEXT

A number sign (#) is used with this entry because of evidence that autosomal dominant deafness-15 (DFNA15) is caused by heterozygous mutation in the POU4F3 gene (602460) on chromosome 5q32.


Description

Autosomal dominant deafness-15 is a form of progressive nonsyndromic sensorineural hearing loss with postlingual onset between the second and sixth decades of life (summary by Kim et al., 2013).


Clinical Features

Vahava et al. (1998) studied progressive hearing loss in an Israeli Jewish family that traced its ancestry to Italy and to subsequent migrations through various North African and Middle Eastern countries, including Tunisia, Libya, and Egypt, with branches of the family now living in Israel, the United States, and Belgium. Five generations demonstrated autosomal dominant inheritance of progressive deafness. Earliest record of a hearing-impaired family member concerned an individual born in 1843 in Libya. He had 4 children, only 1 of whom was affected. Hearing loss in this kindred, referred to as family H, began between ages 18 and 30, with a moderate to severe defect in hearing by age 50.

Collin et al. (2008) reported a large Dutch family in which multiple members had hearing loss. The was large clinical variability in terms of age at onset, levels of progression, and shape of audiograms. For example, 1 patient reported subjective onset around puberty, whereas another had onset at 20 years of age.

Lee et al. (2010) reported a 44-year-old Korean woman with progressive sensorineural hearing loss beginning at age 20 years. Family history revealed affected family members spanning 4 generations.

Kim et al. (2013) reported a large 6-generation Korean family in which multiple individuals had postlingual onset of sensorineural hearing loss. The age at onset ranged from the early teens to late fifties, and no patients had additional syndromic features. Pure tone audiograms showed bilateral minimal to moderate sensorineural hearing loss with flat to gently downward-sloping audiograms.


Inheritance

The transmission pattern of DFNA15 in the families reported by Vahava et al. (1998) and Kim et al. (2013) was consistent with autosomal dominant inheritance.


Mapping

By linkage analysis of a large family with hearing loss, Vahava et al. (1998) identified a locus, termed DFNA15, on chromosome 5q31-q33. The candidate 25-cM region was bounded by D5S1979 and D5S422. Analysis of the maximum-likelihood genetic model for deafness in this family indicated a rare autosomal dominant allele with full penetrance by age 40 and 0.05 probability of deafness from other causes by age 40 (in other words, 5% phenocopies).


Molecular Genetics

In searching for candidate genes in the DFNA15-linked region, Vahava et al. (1998) noted that the class 4 POU domain transcription factor-3 gene (POU4F3) may lie on 5q, on the basis of the localization of mouse Pou4f3 and the homology of human chromosomes 5 and 18 with mouse chromosome 18. POU4F3 was considered an excellent candidate for a gene causing human deafness because targeted deletion of both alleles of Pou4f3 caused complete deafness in mice. To map POU4F3 more precisely, they synthesized primers for the human POU4F3 cDNA sequence and used these to amplify pools of the CEPH3 yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) library. In this way, YACs containing markers linked to deafness in family H were found, indicating that POU4F3 must lie within the DFNA15-linked region. Using primers designed to amplify and sequence the entire coding region, they found an 8-bp deletion (602460.0001) in exon 2 of the POU4F3 gene. The predicted result of this deletion was a frameshift beginning at codon 295 and a premature translation stop at position 299. Deletion was not found in the POU4F3 gene of 114 unrelated individuals of various North African and Middle Eastern Jewish ancestry selected to represent the contribution of various ethnic Jewish populations to family H.

In affected members of 2 unrelated Dutch families with autosomal dominant hearing loss, Collin et al. (2008) identified 2 different heterozygous mutations in the POU4F3 gene (602460.0002 and 602460.0003, respectively).

In a 44-year-old Korean woman with DFNA15, Lee et al. (2010) identified a heterozygous truncating mutation in the POU4F3 gene (602460.0005). In vitro expression studies showed that the mutant protein lost most of its nuclear localization as well as transcriptional activity. The proband was 1 of 42 unrelated Korean patients with autosomal dominant nonsyndromic hearing loss who were sequenced for POU4F3 mutations.

Using a combination of linkage analysis and whole-exome sequencing, Kim et al. (2013) identified a heterozygous missense mutation in the POU4F3 gene (R326K; 602460) in affected members of a large Korean family with DFNA15.


Animal Model

By comparing inner ear gene expression profiles of embryonic day 16.5 wildtype and Pou4f3-mutant deaf mice, Hertzano et al. (2004) identified the GFI1 gene (600871) as a target gene regulated by Pou4f3. Deficiency of Pou4f3 led to a reduction in Gfi1 expression levels, and the dynamics of Gfi1 mRNA abundance closely followed the pattern of expression for Pou4f3. Immunohistochemical and ultrastructural analyses revealed that loss of Gfi1 resulted in outer hair cell degeneration, which appeared comparable to that observed in Pou4f3 mutants. Hertzano et al. (2004) concluded that Gfi1 is the first downstream target of a hair cell-specific transcription factor, and they suggested that outer hair cell degeneration in Pou4f3 mutants may be largely or entirely a result of the loss of expression of Gfi1.


REFERENCES

  1. Collin, R. W. J., Chellappa, R., Pauw, R.-J., Vriend, G., Oostrik, J., van Drunen, W., Huygen, P. L., Admiraal, R., Hoefsloot, L. H., Cremers, F. P. M., Xiang, M., Cremers, C. W. R. J., Kremer, H. Missense mutations in POU4F3 cause autosomal dominant hearing impairment DFNA15 and affect subcellular localization and DNA binding. Hum. Mutat. 29: 545-554, 2008. [PubMed: 18228599] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1002/humu.20693]

  2. Hertzano, R., Montcouquiol, M., Rashi-Elkeles, S., Elkon, R., Yucel, R., Frankel, W. N., Rechavi, G., Moroy, T., Friedman, T. B., Kelley, M. W., Avraham, K. B. Transcription profiling of inner ears from Pou4f3(ddl/ddl) identifies Gfi1 as a target of the Pou4f3 deafness gene. Hum. Molec. Genet. 13: 2143-2153, 2004. [PubMed: 15254021] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddh218]

  3. Kim, H.-J., Won, H.-H., Park, K.-J., Hong, S. H., Ki, C.-S., Cho, S. S., Venselaar, H., Vriend, G., Kim, J.-W. SNP linkage analysis and whole exome sequencing identify a novel POU4F3 mutation in autosomal dominant late-onset nonsyndromic hearing loss (DFNA15). PLos One 8: e79063, 2013. Note: Electronic Article. [PubMed: 24260153] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0079063]

  4. Lee, H. K., Park, H.-J., Lee, K.-Y., Park, R., Kim, U.-K. A novel frameshift mutation of POU4F3 gene associated with autosomal dominant non-syndromic hearing loss. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 396: 626-630, 2010. Note: Erratum: Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 398: 790 only, 2010. [PubMed: 20434433] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbrc.2010.04.132]

  5. Vahava, O., Morell, R., Lynch, E. D., Weiss, S., Kagan, M. E., Ahituv, N., Morrow, J. E., Lee, M. K., Skvorak, A. B., Morton, C. C., Blumenfeld, A., Frydman, M., Friedman, T. B., King, M.-C., Avraham, K. B. Mutation in transcription factor POU4F3 associated with inherited progressive hearing loss in humans. Science 279: 1950-1954, 1998. [PubMed: 9506947] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.279.5358.1950]


Contributors:
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 3/5/2014
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 1/8/2014
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 7/22/2008
George E. Tiller - updated : 3/26/2007

Creation Date:
Victor A. McKusick : 3/20/1998

Edit History:
carol : 05/12/2017
carol : 06/22/2016
mcolton : 5/7/2014
alopez : 3/12/2014
mcolton : 3/7/2014
ckniffin : 3/5/2014
carol : 1/17/2014
ckniffin : 1/8/2014
terry : 12/2/2008
wwang : 7/29/2008
ckniffin : 7/22/2008
wwang : 3/26/2007
kayiaros : 7/12/1999
dkim : 10/12/1998
alopez : 3/20/1998