Genomic approaches for the discovery of genes mutated in inherited retinal degeneration

In view of their high degree of genetic heterogeneity, inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) pose a significant challenge for identifying novel genetic causes. Thus far, more than 200 genes have been found to be mutated in IRDs, which together contain causal variants in >80% of the cases. Accurate ge...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in medicine 2014-08, Vol.4 (8), p.a017137-a017137
Hauptverfasser: Siemiatkowska, Anna M, Collin, Rob W J, den Hollander, Anneke I, Cremers, Frans P M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In view of their high degree of genetic heterogeneity, inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) pose a significant challenge for identifying novel genetic causes. Thus far, more than 200 genes have been found to be mutated in IRDs, which together contain causal variants in >80% of the cases. Accurate genetic diagnostics is particularly important for isolated cases, in which X-linked and de novo autosomal dominant variants are not uncommon. In addition, new gene- or mutation-specific therapies are emerging, underlining the importance of identifying causative mutations in each individual. Sanger sequencing of selected genes followed by cost-effective targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) can identify defects in known IRD-associated genes in the majority of the cases. Exome NGS in combination with genetic linkage or homozygosity mapping studies can aid the identification of the remaining causal genes. As these are thought to be mutated in
ISSN:2157-1422
2472-5412
DOI:10.1101/cshperspect.a017137