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Complex Structural PPT1 Variant Associated with Non-syndromic Canine Retinal Degeneration

Rod and cone photoreceptors are specialized retinal neurons that have a fundamental role in visual perception, capturing light and transducing it into a neuronal signal. Aberrant functioning of rod and/or cone photoreceptors can ultimately lead to progressive degeneration and eventually blindness. I...

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Autores principales: Murgiano, Leonardo, Becker, Doreen, Torjman, Dina, Niggel, Jessica K., Milano, Ausra, Cullen, Cheryl, Feng, Rui, Wang, Fan, Jagannathan, Vidhya, Pearce-Kelling, Sue, Katz, Martin L., Leeb, Tosso, Aguirre, Gustavo D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Genetics Society of America 2018
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6385984/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30541930
http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/g3.118.200859
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author Murgiano, Leonardo
Becker, Doreen
Torjman, Dina
Niggel, Jessica K.
Milano, Ausra
Cullen, Cheryl
Feng, Rui
Wang, Fan
Jagannathan, Vidhya
Pearce-Kelling, Sue
Katz, Martin L.
Leeb, Tosso
Aguirre, Gustavo D.
author_facet Murgiano, Leonardo
Becker, Doreen
Torjman, Dina
Niggel, Jessica K.
Milano, Ausra
Cullen, Cheryl
Feng, Rui
Wang, Fan
Jagannathan, Vidhya
Pearce-Kelling, Sue
Katz, Martin L.
Leeb, Tosso
Aguirre, Gustavo D.
author_sort Murgiano, Leonardo
collection PubMed
description Rod and cone photoreceptors are specialized retinal neurons that have a fundamental role in visual perception, capturing light and transducing it into a neuronal signal. Aberrant functioning of rod and/or cone photoreceptors can ultimately lead to progressive degeneration and eventually blindness. In man, many rod and rod-cone degenerative diseases are classified as forms of retinitis pigmentosa (RP). Dogs also have a comparable disease grouping termed progressive retinal atrophy (PRA). These diseases are generally due to single gene defects and follow Mendelian inheritance.We collected 51 DNA samples from Miniature Schnauzers affected by PRA (average age of diagnosis ∼3.9 ±1 years), as well as from 56 clinically normal controls of the same breed (average age ∼6.6 ±2.8 years). Pedigree analysis suggested monogenic autosomal recessive inheritance of PRA. GWAS and homozygosity mapping defined a critical interval in the first 4,796,806 bp of CFA15. Whole genome sequencing of two affected cases, a carrier and a control identified two candidate variants within the critical interval. One was an intronic SNV in HIVEP3, and the other was a complex structural variant consisting of the duplication of exon 5 of the PPT1 gene along with a conversion and insertion (named PPT1(dci)). PPT1(dci) was confirmed homozygous in a cohort of 22 cases, and 12 more cases were homozygous for the CFA15 haplotype. Additionally, the variant was found homozygous in 6 non-affected dogs of age higher than the average age of onset. The HIVEP3 variant was found heterozygous (n = 4) and homozygous wild-type (n = 1) in cases either homozygous for PPT1(dci) or for the mapped CFA15 haplotype. We detected the wildtype and three aberrant PPT1 transcripts in isolated white blood cell mRNA extracted from a PRA case homozygous for PPT1(dci), and the aberrant transcripts involved inclusion of the duplicated exon 5 and novel exons following the activation of cryptic splice sites. No neurological signs were detected among the dogs homozygous for the PPT1(dci) variant. Therefore, we propose PPT1(dci) as causative for a non-syndromic form of PRA (PRA(PPT1)) that shows incomplete penetrance in Miniature Schnauzers, potentially related to the presence of the wild-type transcript. To our knowledge, this is the first case of isolated retinal degeneration associated with a PPT1 variant.
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spelling pubmed-63859842019-02-26 Complex Structural PPT1 Variant Associated with Non-syndromic Canine Retinal Degeneration Murgiano, Leonardo Becker, Doreen Torjman, Dina Niggel, Jessica K. Milano, Ausra Cullen, Cheryl Feng, Rui Wang, Fan Jagannathan, Vidhya Pearce-Kelling, Sue Katz, Martin L. Leeb, Tosso Aguirre, Gustavo D. G3 (Bethesda) Investigations Rod and cone photoreceptors are specialized retinal neurons that have a fundamental role in visual perception, capturing light and transducing it into a neuronal signal. Aberrant functioning of rod and/or cone photoreceptors can ultimately lead to progressive degeneration and eventually blindness. In man, many rod and rod-cone degenerative diseases are classified as forms of retinitis pigmentosa (RP). Dogs also have a comparable disease grouping termed progressive retinal atrophy (PRA). These diseases are generally due to single gene defects and follow Mendelian inheritance.We collected 51 DNA samples from Miniature Schnauzers affected by PRA (average age of diagnosis ∼3.9 ±1 years), as well as from 56 clinically normal controls of the same breed (average age ∼6.6 ±2.8 years). Pedigree analysis suggested monogenic autosomal recessive inheritance of PRA. GWAS and homozygosity mapping defined a critical interval in the first 4,796,806 bp of CFA15. Whole genome sequencing of two affected cases, a carrier and a control identified two candidate variants within the critical interval. One was an intronic SNV in HIVEP3, and the other was a complex structural variant consisting of the duplication of exon 5 of the PPT1 gene along with a conversion and insertion (named PPT1(dci)). PPT1(dci) was confirmed homozygous in a cohort of 22 cases, and 12 more cases were homozygous for the CFA15 haplotype. Additionally, the variant was found homozygous in 6 non-affected dogs of age higher than the average age of onset. The HIVEP3 variant was found heterozygous (n = 4) and homozygous wild-type (n = 1) in cases either homozygous for PPT1(dci) or for the mapped CFA15 haplotype. We detected the wildtype and three aberrant PPT1 transcripts in isolated white blood cell mRNA extracted from a PRA case homozygous for PPT1(dci), and the aberrant transcripts involved inclusion of the duplicated exon 5 and novel exons following the activation of cryptic splice sites. No neurological signs were detected among the dogs homozygous for the PPT1(dci) variant. Therefore, we propose PPT1(dci) as causative for a non-syndromic form of PRA (PRA(PPT1)) that shows incomplete penetrance in Miniature Schnauzers, potentially related to the presence of the wild-type transcript. To our knowledge, this is the first case of isolated retinal degeneration associated with a PPT1 variant. Genetics Society of America 2018-12-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6385984/ /pubmed/30541930 http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/g3.118.200859 Text en Copyright © 2019 Murgiano et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Investigations
Murgiano, Leonardo
Becker, Doreen
Torjman, Dina
Niggel, Jessica K.
Milano, Ausra
Cullen, Cheryl
Feng, Rui
Wang, Fan
Jagannathan, Vidhya
Pearce-Kelling, Sue
Katz, Martin L.
Leeb, Tosso
Aguirre, Gustavo D.
Complex Structural PPT1 Variant Associated with Non-syndromic Canine Retinal Degeneration
title Complex Structural PPT1 Variant Associated with Non-syndromic Canine Retinal Degeneration
title_full Complex Structural PPT1 Variant Associated with Non-syndromic Canine Retinal Degeneration
title_fullStr Complex Structural PPT1 Variant Associated with Non-syndromic Canine Retinal Degeneration
title_full_unstemmed Complex Structural PPT1 Variant Associated with Non-syndromic Canine Retinal Degeneration
title_short Complex Structural PPT1 Variant Associated with Non-syndromic Canine Retinal Degeneration
title_sort complex structural ppt1 variant associated with non-syndromic canine retinal degeneration
topic Investigations
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6385984/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30541930
http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/g3.118.200859
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