| Literature DB >> 21042566 |
Li Jia Chen1, Pancy O S Tam, Clement C Y Tham, Xiao Ying Liang, Sylvia W Y Chiang, Oscar Canlas, Robert Ritch, Douglas J Rhee, Chi Pui Pang.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate the involvement of SPARC (secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine) mutations and copy number variation in juvenile-onset primary open-angle glaucoma (JPOAG).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21042566 PMCID: PMC2965575
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Vis ISSN: 1090-0535 Impact factor: 2.367
Demographic and clinical characteristics of Chinese JPOAG and control subjects.
| | | | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| JPOAG | 46 | 19 (41.3) | 6–40 | 24.8 (8.5) | 23–69 | 30 | 0.5–0.9 | 0.8 |
| Control | 95 | 40 (42.1) | 61–94 | 75.1 (7.1) | 10–21 | 15 | 0.2–0.5 | 0.3 |
The asterisk indicates that the IOP value is the recorded highest IOP, and the vertical cup/disc ratio (VCDR) is the measure at the latest follow-up visit before study enrollment.
Primer sequences and PCR conditions for SPARC sequencing.
| | | | | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SPARC-1 (promoter + exon 1) | CCAGTTCCAAATCATCAAGGA | GGGGTTGGTGCAACTATAGAA | 1.5 | 59 | 668 |
| SPARC-2 (exon 2) | AAATGGAACCAACCTCCTCA | CAATGGTCCTCATCCCAGTT | 1.5 | 60 | 388 |
| SPARC-3 (exon 3) | AGCTCCCCTAGCCTGTATCC | CCCTAATTTCTCAGGGCACA | 1.5 | 60 | 225 |
| SPARC-4 (exon 4) | CTTTCCCTAACACCCCTGGT | TCATGTAGGCTGTCCTCGTG | 1.5 | 60 | 367 |
| SPARC-5 (exon 5) | TGTGCTAGTCCAGGTGATGC | TGTATTCCGAAGTGCCCAAT | 1.5 | 60 | 222 |
| SPARC-6 (exon 6) | CAGTGTCCCCATCTCTGAAA | CCCAAGACAGGAGTCTGGAA | 1.5 | 60 | 250 |
| SPARC-7 (exon 7) | AAGAAACTGTGGCCTGGAGA | CTGGTGCTCAGGGGTAAATG | 1.5 | 60 | 396 |
| SPARC-8 (exon 8) | CTGGCTAGTCTCTGCCTGCT | TCACTCTAGGGTCTGGGGTCT | 2.0 | 60 | 279 |
| SPARC-9 (exon 9) | GGGTGTGGAGCTTTTCCAT | CCCCTTGCTTCTTTGTTCAG | 1.5 | 60 | 229 |
| SPARC-10 (exon 10) | TCCACTGACTCCTTGGGAAG | GGCAGAACAACAAACCATCC | 1.5 | 60 | 198 |
The promoter (−1 to −318 bp from the transcription initiation site), 5′-untranslated region (the noncoding exon 1), coding regions, exon-intron boundaries, and a portion of the 3′-untranslated region (+1 to +94 bp downstream the stop codon) were covered by the amplimers. In the table, Ta indicates annealing temperature and Bp indicates base pairs.
TaqMan® Copy Number Assays used for copy number analysis of SPARC.
| Hs02667978_cn | FAM | GTCTCAAAACCCCAGCTCAAAATAC | 151021358 |
| Hs06106867_cn | FAM | GTCAGAAGGTTGTTGTCCTCATCCC | 151027253 |
| Hs06124887_cn | FAM | CTTCCCAGAGGTGTGGATTAATGGT | 151046100 |
The three assays selected are for target sequences located in proximity to the 5′- and 3′-ends of and within the gene. Any assay(s) detected to have gain or loss of copy number(s) may indicate, at least partially, the copy number of the SPARC gene.
SPARC variants detected in Chinese JPOAG and control subjects.
| | | | | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exon 1 | c.-186G>A* | – | rs4958281 | 5 (5.4) | 6 (3.2) | 0.35 | 0/5/41 | 0/6/89 | 0.34 |
| Intron 2 | IVS2+56G>C | – | rs7714314 | 3 (3.3) | 7 (3.7) | 1.0 | 0/3/43 | 1/5/89 | 0.75 |
| Exon 3 | c.66A>G | Glu22Glu | rs2304052 | 2 (2.2) | 5 (2.6) | 1.0 | 0/2/44 | 0/5/90 | 1.0 |
| Intron 3 | IVS3+8G>T | – | novel | 0 (0) | 2 (1.1) | - | 0/0/46 | 0/2/93 | - |
| Intron 3 | IVS3+32C>T | – | novel | 1 (1.1) | 0 (0) | - | 0/1/45 | 0/0/95 | - |
| Intron 3 | IVS3+36T>G | – | rs2116780 | 36 (39.1) | 77 (40.5) | 0.82 | 7/22/17 | 15/47/33 | 0.97 |
| Intron 3 | IVS3+42T>C | – | rs2304051 | 4 (4.3) | 6 (3.2) | 0.73 | 0/4/42 | 0/6/89 | 0.73 |
| Intron 4 | IVS4+31C>T | – | rs1978707 | 45 (48.9) | 92 (48.4) | 0.94 | 10/25/11 | 24/44/27 | 0.67 |
| Intron 5 | IVS5–59T>G | – | rs7719521 | 44 (47.8) | 89 (46.8) | 0.88 | 10/24/12 | 22/45/28 | 0.86 |
| Intron 7 | IVS7+100G>A | – | rs729853 | 38 (41.3) | 80 (42.1) | 0.90 | 7/24/15 | 16/48/31 | 0.97 |
| 3′-UTR | c.912+29C>G | – | rs1053411 | 39 (42.4) | 80 (42.1) | 0.96 | 8/23/15 | 16/48/31 | 0.99 |
*This SNP is located 186 bp upstream the start codon “ATG”; 3′-UTR: 3′-untranslated region.
Figure 1Chromatograms of the novel SPARC variants detected in this study. A: The variant IVS3+8G>T detected in a control subject, this participant is also heterozygous for the rs2116780:T>G polymorphism. B: The variant IVS3+32C>T detected in a Chinese patient with JPOAG.
Figure 2Linkage disequilibrium and haplotype association analyses for the SPARC variants detected in this study. A: Linkage disequilibrium plot of 11 SNPs of the SPARC gene in the combined subjects. D' values corresponding to each SNP pair are expressed as a percentage and shown within the respective square. The five most common SNPs constitute a haplotype block spanning from intron 3 to the 3′-UTR of the gene. B: Haplotype-based association analysis of the 5 most common SNPs in the LD block with JPOAG. The frequencies of each haplotype in the patient and control groups were presented in percentage. Only those haplotypes with frequencies >1% were shown.
Figure 3Copy number of the SPARC gene in the family members from the Philippine pedigree and the randomly selected Chinese JPOAG patients and controls. Each bar represents the copy number prediction of the target sequence in each subject. And each color presents each copy number assay. Thus, each individual is represented by three bars. The red arrow indicates the reference line for two copies. One sample (G1070) was predicted to have a copy number of 3 but with a confidence of <50%.