| Literature DB >> 30825406 |
Christina Zeitz1, Christelle Michiels1, Marion Neuillé1, Christoph Friedburg2, Christel Condroyer1, Fiona Boyard1, Aline Antonio1,3, Nassima Bouzidi1, Diana Milicevic1, Robin Veaux1, Aurore Tourville1, Axelle Zoumba1, Imene Seneina1, Marine Foussard1, Camille Andrieu3, Markus N Preising2, Steven Blanchard4, Jean-Paul Saraiva4, Lilia Mesrob5,6, Edith Le Floch5, Claire Jubin5, Vincent Meyer5, Hélène Blanché7, Anne Boland5, Jean-François Deleuze5,7, Dror Sharon8, Isabelle Drumare9, Sabine Defoort-Dhellemmes9, Elfride De Baere10, Bart P Leroy10,11,12, Xavier Zanlonghi13, Ingele Casteels14, Thomy J de Ravel15, Irina Balikova11,16, Rob K Koenekoop17, Fanny Laffargue18, Rebecca McLean19, Irene Gottlob19, Dominique Bonneau20,21, Daniel F Schorderet22,23,24, Francis L Munier22, Martin McKibbin25, Katrina Prescott26, Valerie Pelletier27,28, Hélène Dollfus27,28,29, Yaumara Perdomo-Trujillo27, Céline Faure3,30, Charlotte Reiff31, Bernd Wissinger32, Isabelle Meunier33,34, Susanne Kohl32, Eyal Banin8, Eberhart Zrenner32,35, Bernhard Jurklies36, Birgit Lorenz2, José-Alain Sahel1,3,37,38,39, Isabelle Audo1,3,40.
Abstract
Inherited retinal disorders (IRD) represent clinically and genetically heterogeneous diseases. To date, pathogenic variants have been identified in ~260 genes. Albeit that many genes are implicated in IRD, for 30-50% of the cases, the gene defect is unknown. These cases may be explained by novel gene defects, by overlooked structural variants, by variants in intronic, promoter or more distant regulatory regions, and represent synonymous variants of known genes contributing to the dysfunction of the respective proteins. Patients with one subgroup of IRD, namely incomplete congenital stationary night blindness (icCSNB), show a very specific phenotype. The major cause of this condition is the presence of a hemizygous pathogenic variant in CACNA1F. A comprehensive study applying direct Sanger sequencing of the gene-coding regions, exome and genome sequencing applied to a large cohort of patients with a clinical diagnosis of icCSNB revealed indeed that seven of the 189 CACNA1F-related cases have intronic and synonymous disease-causing variants leading to missplicing as validated by minigene approaches. These findings highlight that gene-locus sequencing may be a very efficient method in detecting disease-causing variants in clinically well-characterized patients with a diagnosis of IRD, like icCSNB.Entities:
Keywords: CACNA1F; IRD; gene defect; icCSNB; intronic variants; minigene approach; synonymous variants
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30825406 DOI: 10.1002/humu.23735
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878