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IROme, a New High-Throughput Molecular Tool for the Diagnosis of Inherited Retinal Dystrophies

The molecular diagnosis of retinal dystrophies is difficult because of the very important number of genes implicated and is rarely helped by genotype-phenotype correlations. This prompted us to develop IROme, a custom designed in solution-based targeted exon capture assay (SeqCap EZ Choice library,...

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Autores principales: Schorderet, Daniel F., Iouranova, Alexandra, Favez, Tatiana, Tiab, Leila, Escher, Pascal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3591198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23484092
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/198089
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author Schorderet, Daniel F.
Iouranova, Alexandra
Favez, Tatiana
Tiab, Leila
Escher, Pascal
author_facet Schorderet, Daniel F.
Iouranova, Alexandra
Favez, Tatiana
Tiab, Leila
Escher, Pascal
author_sort Schorderet, Daniel F.
collection PubMed
description The molecular diagnosis of retinal dystrophies is difficult because of the very important number of genes implicated and is rarely helped by genotype-phenotype correlations. This prompted us to develop IROme, a custom designed in solution-based targeted exon capture assay (SeqCap EZ Choice library, Roche NimbleGen) for 60 retinitis pigmentosa-linked genes and three candidate genes (942 exons). Pyrosequencing was performed on a Roche 454 GS Junior benchtop high-throughput sequencing platform. In total, 23 patients affected by retinitis pigmentosa were analyzed. Per patient, 39.6 Mb were generated, and 1111 sequence variants were detected on average, at a median coverage of 17-fold. After data filtering and sequence variant prioritization, disease-causing mutations were identified in ABCA4, CNGB1, GUCY2D, PROM1, PRPF8, PRPF31, PRPH2, RHO, RP2, and TULP1 for twelve patients (55%), ten mutations having never been reported previously. Potential mutations were identified in 5 additional patients, and in only 6 patients no molecular diagnosis could be established (26%). In conclusion, targeted exon capture and next-generation sequencing are a valuable and efficient approach to identify disease-causing sequence variants in retinal dystrophies.
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spelling pubmed-35911982013-03-12 IROme, a New High-Throughput Molecular Tool for the Diagnosis of Inherited Retinal Dystrophies Schorderet, Daniel F. Iouranova, Alexandra Favez, Tatiana Tiab, Leila Escher, Pascal Biomed Res Int Research Article The molecular diagnosis of retinal dystrophies is difficult because of the very important number of genes implicated and is rarely helped by genotype-phenotype correlations. This prompted us to develop IROme, a custom designed in solution-based targeted exon capture assay (SeqCap EZ Choice library, Roche NimbleGen) for 60 retinitis pigmentosa-linked genes and three candidate genes (942 exons). Pyrosequencing was performed on a Roche 454 GS Junior benchtop high-throughput sequencing platform. In total, 23 patients affected by retinitis pigmentosa were analyzed. Per patient, 39.6 Mb were generated, and 1111 sequence variants were detected on average, at a median coverage of 17-fold. After data filtering and sequence variant prioritization, disease-causing mutations were identified in ABCA4, CNGB1, GUCY2D, PROM1, PRPF8, PRPF31, PRPH2, RHO, RP2, and TULP1 for twelve patients (55%), ten mutations having never been reported previously. Potential mutations were identified in 5 additional patients, and in only 6 patients no molecular diagnosis could be established (26%). In conclusion, targeted exon capture and next-generation sequencing are a valuable and efficient approach to identify disease-causing sequence variants in retinal dystrophies. Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2013 2012-12-26 /pmc/articles/PMC3591198/ /pubmed/23484092 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/198089 Text en Copyright © 2013 Daniel F. Schorderet et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under 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
Schorderet, Daniel F.
Iouranova, Alexandra
Favez, Tatiana
Tiab, Leila
Escher, Pascal
IROme, a New High-Throughput Molecular Tool for the Diagnosis of Inherited Retinal Dystrophies
title IROme, a New High-Throughput Molecular Tool for the Diagnosis of Inherited Retinal Dystrophies
title_full IROme, a New High-Throughput Molecular Tool for the Diagnosis of Inherited Retinal Dystrophies
title_fullStr IROme, a New High-Throughput Molecular Tool for the Diagnosis of Inherited Retinal Dystrophies
title_full_unstemmed IROme, a New High-Throughput Molecular Tool for the Diagnosis of Inherited Retinal Dystrophies
title_short IROme, a New High-Throughput Molecular Tool for the Diagnosis of Inherited Retinal Dystrophies
title_sort irome, a new high-throughput molecular tool for the diagnosis of inherited retinal dystrophies
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3591198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23484092
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/198089
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