Back to Search Start Over

Towards Uncovering the Role of Incomplete Penetrance in Maculopathies through Sequencing of 105 Disease-Associated Genes.

Authors :
Hitti-Malin RJ
Panneman DM
Corradi Z
Boonen EGM
Astuti G
Dhaenens CM
Stöhr H
Weber BHF
Sharon D
Banin E
Karali M
Banfi S
Ben-Yosef T
Glavač D
Farrar GJ
Ayuso C
Liskova P
Dudakova L
Vajter M
Ołdak M
Szaflik JP
Matynia A
Gorin MB
Kämpjärvi K
Bauwens M
De Baere E
Hoyng CB
Li CHZ
Klaver CCW
Inglehearn CF
Fujinami K
Rivolta C
Allikmets R
Zernant J
Lee W
Podhajcer OL
Fakin A
Sajovic J
AlTalbishi A
Valeina S
Taurina G
Vincent AL
Roberts L
Ramesar R
Sartor G
Luppi E
Downes SM
van den Born LI
McLaren TL
De Roach JN
Lamey TM
Thompson JA
Chen FK
Tracewska AM
Kamakari S
Sallum JMF
Bolz HJ
Kayserili H
Roosing S
Cremers FPM
Source :
Biomolecules [Biomolecules] 2024 Mar 19; Vol. 14 (3). Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Mar 19.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Inherited macular dystrophies (iMDs) are a group of genetic disorders, which affect the central region of the retina. To investigate the genetic basis of iMDs, we used single-molecule Molecular Inversion Probes to sequence 105 maculopathy-associated genes in 1352 patients diagnosed with iMDs. Within this cohort, 39.8% of patients were considered genetically explained by 460 different variants in 49 distinct genes of which 73 were novel variants, with some affecting splicing. The top five most frequent causative genes were ABCA4 (37.2%), PRPH2 (6.7%), CDHR1 (6.1%), PROM1 (4.3%) and RP1L1 (3.1%). Interestingly, variants with incomplete penetrance were revealed in almost one-third of patients considered solved (28.1%), and therefore, a proportion of patients may not be explained solely by the variants reported. This includes eight previously reported variants with incomplete penetrance in addition to CDHR1 :c.783G>A and CNGB3 :c.1208G>A. Notably, segregation analysis was not routinely performed for variant phasing-a limitation, which may also impact the overall diagnostic yield. The relatively high proportion of probands without any putative causal variant (60.2%) highlights the need to explore variants with incomplete penetrance, the potential modifiers of disease and the genetic overlap between iMDs and age-related macular degeneration. Our results provide valuable insights into the genetic landscape of iMDs and warrant future exploration to determine the involvement of other maculopathy genes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2218-273X
Volume :
14
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Biomolecules
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38540785
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/biom14030367