AI Article Synopsis

  • - Albinism is caused by a variety of genes (21 identified), with most cases following an autosomal recessive inheritance pattern, though one form is X-linked; about 70% of cases can be diagnosed through genetic analysis.
  • - Of the undiagnosed cases, roughly 15% carry one pathogenic variant but may have undiscovered variants in non-coding regions; this research involved sequencing a group of 122 heterozygous patients.
  • - From the study, 12 patients received additional diagnoses based on non-coding variants that affected RNA splicing, highlighting the need to investigate non-coding regions to improve diagnostic rates for genetic diseases like albinism.

Article Abstract

Albinism is a genetically heterogeneous disease in which 21 genes are known so far. Its inheritance mode is autosomal recessive except for one X-linked form. The molecular analysis of exonic sequences of these genes allows for about a 70% diagnostic rate. About half (15%) of the unsolved cases are heterozygous for one pathogenic or probably pathogenic variant. Assuming that the missing variant may be located in non-coding regions, we performed sequencing for 122 such heterozygous patients of either the whole genome (27 patients) or our NGS panel (95 patients) that includes, in addition to all exons of the 21 genes, the introns and flanking sequences of five genes, , , , and . Rare variants (MAF < 0.01) in to the first variant were tested by RT-PCR and/or minigene assay. Of the 14 variants tested, nine caused either exon skipping or the inclusion of a pseudoexon, allowing for the diagnosis of 11 patients. This represents 9.8% (12/122) supplementary diagnosis for formerly unsolved patients and 75% (12/16) of those in whom the candidate variant was in to the first variant. Of note, one missense variant was demonstrated to cause skipping of the exon in which it is located, thus shedding new light on its pathogenic mechanism. Searching for non-coding variants and testing them for an effect on RNA splicing is warranted in order to increase the diagnostic rate.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11355033PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms25168657DOI Listing

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