30 research outputs found

    España y la República Romana

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    The common ABCA4 variant p.Asn1868ile shows nonpenetrance and variable expression of stargardt disease when present in trans with severe variants

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    PURPOSE. To assess the occurrence and the disease expression of the common p.Asn1868Ile variant in patients with Stargardt disease (STGD1) harboring known, monoallelic causal ABCA4 variants. METHODS. The coding and noncoding regions of ABCA4 were sequenced in 67 and 63 STGD1 probands respectively, harboring monoallelic ABCA4 variants. In case p.Asn1868Ile was detected, segregation analysis was performed whenever possible. Probands and affected siblings harboring p.Asn1868Ile without additional variants in cis were clinically evaluated retrospe

    Mutation Detection in Patients with Retinal Dystrophies Using Targeted Next Generation Sequencing

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    Retinal dystrophies (RD) constitute a group of blinding diseases that are characterized by clinical variability and pronounced genetic heterogeneity. The different nonsyndromic and syndromic forms of RD can be attributed to mutations in more than 200 genes. Consequently, next generation sequencing (NGS) technologies are among the most promising approaches to identify mutations in RD. We screened a large cohort of patients comprising 89 independent cases and families with various subforms of RD applying different NGS platforms. While mutation screening in 50 cases was performed using a RD gene capture panel, 47 cases were analyzed using whole exome sequencing. One family was analyzed using whole genome sequencing. A detection rate of 61% was achieved including mutations in 34 known and two novel RD genes. A total of 69 distinct mutations were identified, including 39 novel mutations. Notably, genetic findings in several families were not consistent with the initial clinical diagnosis. Clinical reassessment resulted in refinement of the clinical diagnosis in some of these families and confirmed the broad clinical spectrum associated with mutations in RD genes

    Makuladegeneration - Erblindung oder Heilung?

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    Netzwerk AlternsfoRschung (NAR) NAR-Seminar: Heidelberg, 1. April 200

    The Bardet-Biedl Syndrome - Diagnosis and Follow-up

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    The Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a rare inherited ciliopathy, which is accompanied by retinal disease, i.e. rod-cone dystrophy ( retinitis pigmentosa, RP) and other symptoms, especially truncal obesity, polydactyly, renal abnormalities as well as reduced intelligence or learning difficulties. 25 BBS genes are currently known, and these are responsible for the structure and function of primary cilia. Because ciliary integrity is crucial for numerous pathways of developmental signaling, their dysfunction may cause multisystemic disorders - like BBS. Physicians benefit greatly from new molecular genetic methods that have made genetically heterogeneous conditions diagnostically accessible: By next-generation sequencing (NGS), all BBS-associated genes can be analysed simultaneously in a gene panel. As regards the retinal phenotype, genotype-phenotype correlations are not significant. Besides classical autosomal recessive inheritance, oligogenic/triallelic traits have been reported, but these seem to play a minor role, if any (as a growing number of large-scale NGS-based studies suggests). In the absence of causal therapy, the mainstay of ophthalmological endeavour is focused on visual rehabilitation with low vision aids, use of the white cane and training to develop everyday life skills

    Photoreceptor progenitor mRNA analysis reveals exon skipping resulting from the ABCA4 c.5461-10T/C mutation in Stargardt disease

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    PURPOSE: To elucidate the functional effect of the ABCA4 variant c.5461-10T-->C, one of the most frequent variants associated with Stargardt disease (STGD1). DESIGN: Case series. PARTICIPANTS: Seventeen persons with STGD1 carrying ABCA4 variants and 1 control participant. METHODS: Haplotype analysis of 4 homozygotes and 11 heterozygotes for c.5461-10T-->C and sequence analysis of the ABCA4 gene for a homozygous proband. Fibroblasts were reprogrammed from 3 persons with STGD1 into induced pluripotent stem cells, which were differentiated into photoreceptor progenitor cells (PPCs). The effect of the c.5461-10T-->C variant on RNA splicing by reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction was analyzed using PPC mRNA. In vitro assays were performed with minigene constructs containing ABCA4 exon 39. We analyzed the natural history and ophthalmologic characteristics of 4 persons homozygous for c.5461-10T-->C. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Haplotype and rare variant data for ABCA4, RNA splice defects, age at diagnosis, visual acuity, fundus appearance, visual field, electroretinography (ERG) results, fluorescein angiography results, and fundus autofluorescence findings. RESULTS: The frequent ABCA4 variant c.5461-10T-->C has a subtle effect on splicing based on prediction programs. A founder haplotype containing c.5461-10T-->C was found to span approximately 96 kb of ABCA4 and did not contain other rare sequence variants. Patient-derived PPCs showed skipping of exon 39 or exons 39 and 40 in the mRNA. HEK293T cell transduction with minigenes carrying exon 39 showed that the splice defects were the result of the c.5461-10T-->C variant. All 4 subjects carrying the c.5461-10T-->C variant in a homozygous state showed a young age of STGD1 onset, with low visual acuity at presentation and abnormal cone ERG results. All 4 demonstrated severe cone-rod dystrophy before 20 years of age and were legally blind by 25 years of age. CONCLUSIONS: The ABCA4 variant c.5461-10T-->C is located on a founder haplotype lacking other disease-causing rare sequence variants. In vitro studies revealed that it leads to mRNA exon skipping and ABCA4 protein truncation. Given the severe phenotype in persons homozygous for this variant, we conclude that this variant results in the absence of ABCA4 activity
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