159 research outputs found
The importance of electrophysiological and imaging methods in the diagnostics of inherited retinal degenerations: Genotype-phenotype correlations
ÜBER DIE THEORIE DER REAKTIVFARBSTOFFE UND IHRE VERWENDUNG ZUM FÄRBEN VON ZELLULOSEFASERN. DIE REAKTIVE FÄRBUNG, HYDROLYSE DES FARBSTOFFES UND HYDROLYSE DER BINDUNG ZWISCHEN FARBSTOFF UND ZELLULOSE
Homozygosity mapping reveals new nonsense mutation in the FAM161A gene causing autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa in a Palestinian family
Purpose: Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a heterogenous group of inherited retinal degenerations caused by mutations in at least 45 genes. Recently, the FAM161A gene was identified as the causative gene for RP28, an autosomal recessive form of RP.
Methods: We performed a clinical and molecular genetic study of a consanguineous Palestinian family with two three siblings affected with retinitis pigmentosa. DNA samples were collected from the index patient, his father, his affected sister, and two non-affected brothers. DNA sample from the index was subjected to high resolution genome-wide SNP array. Assuming identity-by-descent in this consanguineous family we applied homozygosity mapping to identify disease causing genes.
Results: The index patient reported night blindness since the age of 20 years, followed by moderate disease progression with decrease of peripheral vision, the development of photophobia and later on reduced central vision. At the age of 40 his visual acuity was counting fingers (CF) for both eyes, color discrimination was not possible and his visual fields were severely constricted. Funduscopic examination revealed a typical appearance of advanced RP with optic disc pallor, narrowed retinal vessels, bone-spicule like pigmentary changes in the mid-periphery and atrophic changes in the macula. His younger affected brother (37 years) was reported with overall milder symptoms, while the youngest sister (21 years) reported problems only with night vision. Applying high-density SNP arrays we identified several homozygous genomic regions one of which included the recently identified FAM161A gene mutated in RP28-linked autosomal recessive RP. Sequencing analysis revealed the presence of a novel homozygous nonsense mutation, c.1003C>T/p.R335X in the index patient and the affected sister.
Conclusion: We identified an RP28-linked RP family in the Palestinian population caused by a novel nonsense mutation in FAM161A. RP in this family shows a typical disease onset with moderate to rapid progression into severe visual impairment including central vision in the index and overall milder symptoms in the younger brother and sister.We thank the family members for participation in this study. We also thank the Microarray Facility at the Medical Faculty of the Tübingen University for SNP chip processing. This work was supported by a Trilateral German-Israel-Palestinian Authority program grant of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SCHO 754/5–1 and WI1189/8–1)
ÜBER DIE THEORIE DER REAKTIVFARBSTOFFE UND IHRE VERWENDUNG ZUM FÄRBEN VON ZELLULOSEFASERN (II). DIE UNTERSUCHUNG DER KINETIK DER FÄRBEPROZESSE
De novo intrachromosomal gene conversion from OPN1MW to OPN1LW in the male germline results in Blue Cone Monochromacy
X-linked cone dysfunction disorders such as Blue Cone Monochromacy and
X-linked Cone Dystrophy are characterized by complete loss (of) or reduced L-
and M- cone function due to defects in the OPN1LW/OPN1MW gene cluster. Here we
investigated 24 affected males from 16 families with either a structurally
intact gene cluster or at least one intact single (hybrid) gene but harbouring
rare combinations of common SNPs in exon 3 in single or multiple OPN1LW and
OPN1MW gene copies. We assessed twelve different OPN1LW/MW exon 3 haplotypes
by semi-quantitative minigene splicing assay. Nine haplotypes resulted in
aberrant splicing of ≥20% of transcripts including the known pathogenic
haplotypes (i.e. ‘LIAVA’, ‘LVAVA’) with absent or minute amounts of correctly
spliced transcripts, respectively. De novo formation of the ‘LIAVA’ haplotype
derived from an ancestral less deleterious ‘LIAVS’ haplotype was observed in
one family with strikingly different phenotypes among affected family members.
We could establish intrachromosomal gene conversion in the male germline as
underlying mechanism. Gene conversion in the OPN1LW/OPN1MW genes has been
postulated, however, we are first to demonstrate a de novo gene conversion
within the lineage of a pedigree
Oscillatory Potential-based Characterization of the Human Light-adapted Electroretinogram Using Discrete Wavelet Transform
Purpose: Our aim was to apply multiple discrete wavelet transformation (DWT) types to healthy light-adapted (cone) electroretinogram (ERG) signals in order to optimize DWT analysy in ERG. Oscillatory potentials (OP) were individually extracted from the signals and used to calculate an indicator for ERG analysis.Methods: Light-adapted (LA) 3.0 cd.s/m2 ISCEV standard ERGs were recorded from both eyes of 15 healthy volunteers (mean age: 36.9 ± 13.0 years old; 13 females). LA ERG signal components, such as b-wave and OPs, were analyzed using the discrete wavelet transformation (DWT). An index (%OPi) was proposed to estimate the individual oscillatory potentials (OP1-OP5) by calculating the coefficient ratio of the OP to b-wave. Multiple mother wavelet functions (i.e., Daubechies, Symlet, and Coiflet) with five orders were applied and compared statistically using Wilcoxon tests and paired t-test comparisons with Bonferroni posthoc analyses (p < 0.005). Results: OP4 shows the most energy at both low and high-frequency bands (80Hz and 160Hz), while OP2 has lower energy at the low-frequency band (80Hz) and higher energy at the high-frequency band (160Hz). The %OP2 is the largest among the five individual OPs. %OPs obtained with different wavelet functions differ from each other. Db2 and sym2 seem to be the optimal wavelets for analyzing light-adapted ERG components.Conclusion: Individual OPs of the light-adapted ERG obtained with the DWT analysis may characterize different levels of retinal dysfunction. The %OPi may serve as an indicator in ERG analysis
Unraveling the genetic cause of hereditary ophthalmic disorders in Arab societies from Israel and the Palestinian Authority
Visual impairment due to inherited ophthalmic disorders is amongst the most common disabilities observed in populations
practicing consanguineous marriages. Here we investigated the molecular genetic basis of an unselected broad range of
ophthalmic disorders in 20 consanguineous families from Arab villages of Israel and the Palestinian Authority. Most patients
had little or very poor prior clinical workup and were recruited in a field study. Homozygosity mapping followed by
candidate gene sequencing applying conventional Sanger sequencing or targeted next generation sequencing was performed
in six families. In the remaining 14 families, one affected subject per family was chosen for whole exome sequencing. We
discovered likely disease-causing variants, all homozygous, in 19 of 20 independent families (95%) including a previously
reported novel disease gene for congenital nystagmus associated with foveal hypoplasia. Moreover, we found a family in
which disease-causing variants for two collagenopathies — Stickler and Knobloch syndrome — segregate within a large
sibship. Nine of the 19 distinct variants observed in this study were novel. Our study demonstrated a very high molecular
diagnostic yield for a highly diverse spectrum of rare ophthalmic disorders in Arab patients from Israel and the Palestinian
Authority, even with very limited prior clinical investigation. We conclude that ‘genetic testing first' may be an economic
way to direct clinical care and to support proper genetic counseling and risk assessment in these families
Mutations in the Genes for Interphotoreceptor Matrix Proteoglycans, IMPG1 and IMPG2, in Patients with Vitelliform Macular Lesions
A significant portion of patients diagnosed with vitelliform macular dystrophy (VMD) do not carry causative mutations in the classic VMD genes BEST1 or PRPH2. We therefore performed a mutational screen in a cohort of 106 BEST1/PRPH2-negative VMD patients in two genes encoding secreted interphotoreceptor matrix proteoglycans-1 and -2 (IMPG1 and IMPG2). We identified two novel mutations in IMPG1 in two simplex VMD cases with disease onset in their early childhood, a heterozygous p.(Leu238Pro) missense mutation and a homozygous c.807 + 5G > A splice site mutation. The latter induced partial skipping of exon 7 of IMPG1 in an in vitro splicing assay. Furthermore, we found heterozygous mutations including three stop [p.(Glu226*), p.(Ser522*), p.(Gln856*)] and five missense mutations [p.(Ala243Pro), p.(Gly1008Asp), p.(Phe1016Ser), p.(Tyr1042Cys), p.(Cys1077Phe)] in the IMPG2 gene, one of them, p.(Cys1077Phe), previously associated with VMD. Asymptomatic carriers of the p.(Ala243Pro) and p.(Cys1077Phe) mutations show subtle foveal irregularities that could characterize a subclinical stage of disease. Taken together, our results provide further evidence for an involvement of dominant and recessive mutations in IMPG1 and IMPG2 in VMD pathology. There is a remarkable similarity in the clinical appearance of mutation carriers, presenting with bilateral, central, dome-shaped foveal accumulation of yellowish material with preserved integrity of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Clinical symptoms tend to be more severe for IMPG1 mutations
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