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DNA Copy Number Variants of Known Glaucoma Genes in Relation to Primary Open-Angle Glaucoma

Authors :
Jae H. Kang
Janey L. Wiggs
Jessica N. Cooke Bailey
Paul R. Lichter
Douglas E. Gaasterland
Margaret A. Pericak-Vance
Brian L. Yaspan
Melanie E. Garrett
Anthony Realini
Stephanie Loomis
Gadi Wollstein
Jonathan L. Haines
William G. Christen
Donald J. Zack
Richard K. Lee
Michael A. Hauser
Louis R. Pasquale
Allison E. Ashley-Koch
Yutao Liu
Terry Gaasterland
Douglas Vollrath
R. Rand Allingham
Julia E. Richards
Robert N. Weinreb
William K. Scott
Joel S. Schuman
John H. Fingert
Arthur J. Sit
Murray H. Brilliant
Kuldev Singh
Kang Zhang
Sayoko E. Moroi
Donald L. Budenz
Source :
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, vol 55, iss 12
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, 2014.

Abstract

PURPOSE We examined the role of DNA copy number variants (CNVs) of known glaucoma genes in relation to primary open angle glaucoma (POAG). METHODS Our study included DNA samples from two studies (NEIGHBOR and GLAUGEN). All the samples were genotyped with the Illumina Human660W_Quad_v1 BeadChip. After removing non-blood-derived and amplified DNA samples, we applied quality control steps based on the mean Log R Ratio and the mean B allele frequency. Subsequently, data from 3057 DNA samples (1599 cases and 1458 controls) were analyzed with PennCNV software. We defined CNVs as those ≥5 kilobases (kb) in size and interrogated by ≥5 consecutive probes. We further limited our investigation to CNVs in known POAG-related genes, including CDKN2B-AS1, TMCO1, SIX1/SIX6, CAV1/CAV2, the LRP12-ZFPM2 region, GAS7, ATOH7, FNDC3B, CYP1B1, MYOC, OPTN, WDR36, SRBD1, TBK1, and GALC. RESULTS Genomic duplications of CDKN2B-AS1 and TMCO1 were each found in a single case. Two cases carried duplications in the GAS7 region. Genomic deletions of SIX6 and ATOH7 were each identified in one case. One case carried a TBK1 deletion and another case carried a TBK1 duplication. No controls had duplications or deletions in these six genes. A single control had a duplication in the MYOC region. Deletions of GALC were observed in five cases and two controls. CONCLUSIONS The CNV analysis of a large set of cases and controls revealed the presence of rare CNVs in known POAG susceptibility genes. Our data suggest that these rare CNVs may contribute to POAG pathogenesis and merit functional evaluation.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, vol 55, iss 12
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4d206eaff2f384595f30a7777589b2a8