| Literature DB >> 33670832 |
Isabelle Perrault1, Sylvain Hanein2, Xavier Gérard1, Nelson Mounguengue1, Ryme Bouyakoub1, Mohammed Zarhrate3, Cécile Fourrage4, Fabienne Jabot-Hanin4,5, Béatrice Bocquet6, Isabelle Meunier6,7, Xavier Zanlonghi8,9, Josseline Kaplan1,10, Jean-Michel Rozet1.
Abstract
Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA) encompasses the earliest and most severe retinal dystrophies and can occur as a non-syndromic or a syndromic disease. Molecular diagnosis in LCA is of particular importance in clinical decision-making and patient care since it can provide ocular and extraocular prognostics and identify patients eligible to develop gene-specific therapies. Routine high-throughput molecular testing in LCA yields 70%-80% of genetic diagnosis. In this study, we aimed to investigate the non-coding regions of one non-syndromic LCA gene, RPGRIP1, in a series of six families displaying one single disease allele after a gene-panel screening of 722 LCA families which identified 26 biallelic RPGRIP1 families. Using trio-based high-throughput whole locus sequencing (WLS) for second disease alleles, we identified a founder deep intronic mutation (NM_020366.3:c.1468-128T>G) in 3/6 families. We employed Sanger sequencing to search for the pathologic variant in unresolved LCA cases (106/722) and identified three additional families (two homozygous and one compound heterozygous with the NM_020366.3:c.930+77A>G deep intronic change). This makes the c.1468-128T>G the most frequent RPGRIP1 disease allele (8/60, 13%) in our cohort. Studying patient lymphoblasts, we show that the pathologic variant creates a donor splice-site and leads to the insertion of the pseudo-exon in the mRNA, which we were able to hamper using splice-switching antisense oligonucleotides (AONs), paving the way to therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Leber congenital amaurosis; RPGRIP1; deep intronic variant; oligotherapy
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33670832 PMCID: PMC7922592 DOI: 10.3390/genes12020287
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096