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Analysis of the ABCA4 genomic locus in Stargardt disease

Authors :
Carmen Ayuso
James R. Lupski
Rando Allikmets
Rosa Riveiro-Alvarez
Francesca Simonelli
Stephen H. Tsang
Peter Gouras
Bo Yuan
Jana Zernant
Gerald A. Fishman
Frederick T Collison
Mette Bertelsen
Thomas Rosenberg
Radha Ayyagari
Samuel P. Strom
Francesco Testa
Miguel-Angel Lopez-Martinez
Philip M. Boone
Peter L. Nagy
Michael B. Gorin
Yajing Angela Xie
Zernant, Jana
Xie, Yajing A. ngela
Ayuso, Carmen
Riveiro Alvarez, Rosa
Lopez Martinez, Miguel Angel
Simonelli, Francesca
Testa, Francesco
Gorin, Michael B.
Strom, Samuel P.
Bertelsen, Mette
Rosenberg, Thoma
Boone, Philip M.
Yuan, Bo
Ayyagari, Radha
Nagy, Peter L.
Tsang, Stephen H.
Gouras, Peter
Collison, Frederick T.
Lupski, James R.
Fishman, Gerald A.
Allikmets, Rando
Source :
Human molecular genetics, vol 23, iss 25
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2014.

Abstract

Autosomal recessive Stargardt disease (STGD1, MIM 248200) is caused by mutations in the ABCA4 gene. Complete sequencing of ABCA4 in STGD patients identifies compound heterozygous or homozygous disease-associated alleles in 65-70% of patients and only one mutation in 15-20% of patients. This study was designed to find the missing disease-causing ABCA4 variation by a combination of next-generation sequencing (NGS), array-Comparative Genome Hybridization (aCGH) screening, familial segregation and in silico analyses. The entire 140 kb ABCA4 genomic locus was sequenced in 114 STGD patients with one known ABCA4 exonic mutation revealing, on average, 200 intronic variants per sample. Filtering of these data resulted in 141 candidates for new mutations. Two variants were detected in four samples, two in three samples, and 20 variants in two samples, the remaining 117 new variants were detected only once. Multimodal analysis suggested 12 new likely pathogenic intronic ABCA4 variants, some of which were specific to (isolated) ethnic groups. No copy number variation (large deletions and insertions) was detected in any patient suggesting that it is a very rare event in the ABCA4 locus. Many variants were excluded since they were not conserved in non-human primates, were frequent in African populations and, therefore, represented ancestral, and not disease-associated, variants. The sequence variability in the ABCA4 locus is extensive and the non-coding sequences do not harbor frequent mutations in STGD patients of European-American descent. Defining disease-associated alleles in the ABCA4 locus requires exceptionally well characterized large cohorts and extensive analyses by a combination of various approaches.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human molecular genetics, vol 23, iss 25
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1126b46d92b8459a9229a08382335641