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Comparative genomic mapping of uncharacterized canine retinal ESTs to identify novel candidate genes for hereditary retinal disorders

PURPOSE: To identify the genomic location of previously uncharacterized canine retina-expressed expressed sequence tags (ESTs), and thus identify potential candidate genes for heritable retinal disorders. METHODS: A set of over 500 retinal canine ESTs were mapped onto the canine genome using the RHD...

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Autores principales: Zangerl, B., Johnson, J. L., Pillardy, J., Sun, Q., André, C., Galibert, F., Acland, G.M., Aguirre, G.D.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Vision 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2683029/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19452016
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author Zangerl, B.
Johnson, J. L.
Pillardy, J.
Sun, Q.
André, C.
Galibert, F.
Acland, G.M.
Aguirre, G.D.
author_facet Zangerl, B.
Johnson, J. L.
Pillardy, J.
Sun, Q.
André, C.
Galibert, F.
Acland, G.M.
Aguirre, G.D.
author_sort Zangerl, B.
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: To identify the genomic location of previously uncharacterized canine retina-expressed expressed sequence tags (ESTs), and thus identify potential candidate genes for heritable retinal disorders. METHODS: A set of over 500 retinal canine ESTs were mapped onto the canine genome using the RHDF(5000–2) radiation hybrid (RH) panel, and the resulting map positions were compared to their respective localization in the CanFam2 assembly of the canine genome sequence. RESULTS: Unique map positions could be assigned for 99% of the mapped clones, of which only 29% showed significant homology to known RefSeq sequences. A comparison between RH map and sequence assembly indicated some areas of discrepancy. Retinal expressed genes were not concentrated in particular areas of the canine genome, and also were located on the canine Y chromosome (CFAY). Several of the EST clones were located within areas of conserved synteny to human retinal disease loci. CONCLUSIONS: RH mapping of canine retinal ESTs provides insight into the location of potential candidate genes for hereditary retinal disorders, and, by comparison with the assembled canine genome sequence, highlights inconsistencies with the current assembly. Regions of conserved synteny between the canine and the human genomes allow this information to be extrapolated to identify potential positional candidate genes for mapped human retinal disorders. Furthermore, these ESTs can help identify novel or uncharacterized genes of significance for better understanding of retinal morphology, physiology, and pathology.
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spelling pubmed-26830292009-05-18 Comparative genomic mapping of uncharacterized canine retinal ESTs to identify novel candidate genes for hereditary retinal disorders Zangerl, B. Johnson, J. L. Pillardy, J. Sun, Q. André, C. Galibert, F. Acland, G.M. Aguirre, G.D. Mol Vis Research Article PURPOSE: To identify the genomic location of previously uncharacterized canine retina-expressed expressed sequence tags (ESTs), and thus identify potential candidate genes for heritable retinal disorders. METHODS: A set of over 500 retinal canine ESTs were mapped onto the canine genome using the RHDF(5000–2) radiation hybrid (RH) panel, and the resulting map positions were compared to their respective localization in the CanFam2 assembly of the canine genome sequence. RESULTS: Unique map positions could be assigned for 99% of the mapped clones, of which only 29% showed significant homology to known RefSeq sequences. A comparison between RH map and sequence assembly indicated some areas of discrepancy. Retinal expressed genes were not concentrated in particular areas of the canine genome, and also were located on the canine Y chromosome (CFAY). Several of the EST clones were located within areas of conserved synteny to human retinal disease loci. CONCLUSIONS: RH mapping of canine retinal ESTs provides insight into the location of potential candidate genes for hereditary retinal disorders, and, by comparison with the assembled canine genome sequence, highlights inconsistencies with the current assembly. Regions of conserved synteny between the canine and the human genomes allow this information to be extrapolated to identify potential positional candidate genes for mapped human retinal disorders. Furthermore, these ESTs can help identify novel or uncharacterized genes of significance for better understanding of retinal morphology, physiology, and pathology. Molecular Vision 2009-05-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2683029/ /pubmed/19452016 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Zangerl, B.
Johnson, J. L.
Pillardy, J.
Sun, Q.
André, C.
Galibert, F.
Acland, G.M.
Aguirre, G.D.
Comparative genomic mapping of uncharacterized canine retinal ESTs to identify novel candidate genes for hereditary retinal disorders
title Comparative genomic mapping of uncharacterized canine retinal ESTs to identify novel candidate genes for hereditary retinal disorders
title_full Comparative genomic mapping of uncharacterized canine retinal ESTs to identify novel candidate genes for hereditary retinal disorders
title_fullStr Comparative genomic mapping of uncharacterized canine retinal ESTs to identify novel candidate genes for hereditary retinal disorders
title_full_unstemmed Comparative genomic mapping of uncharacterized canine retinal ESTs to identify novel candidate genes for hereditary retinal disorders
title_short Comparative genomic mapping of uncharacterized canine retinal ESTs to identify novel candidate genes for hereditary retinal disorders
title_sort comparative genomic mapping of uncharacterized canine retinal ests to identify novel candidate genes for hereditary retinal disorders
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2683029/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19452016
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