Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/132846
Title: Eight previously unidentified mutations found in the OA1 ocular albinism gene
Authors: Mayeur, Hélène
Roche, Olivier
Vêtu, Christelle
Jaliffa, Carolina
Marchant, Dominique
Dollfus, Hélène
Bonneau, Dominique
Munier, Francis L.
Schorderet, Daniel F.
Levin, Alex V.
Héon, Elise
Sutherland, Joanne
Lacombe, Didier
Said, Edith
Mezer, Eedy
Kaplan, Josseline
Dufier, Jean-Louis
Marsac, Cécile
Menasche, Maurice
Abitbol, Marc
Keywords: Albinism, ocular -- Case studies
Epithelium
Mutation (Biology)
Issue Date: 2006
Publisher: BioMed Central Ltd.
Citation: Mayeur, H., Roche, O., Vêtu, C., Jaliffa, C., Marchant, D., Dollfus, H.,...Abitbol, M. (2006). Eight previously unidentified mutations found in the OA1 ocular albinism gene. BMC Medical Genetics, 7, 1-8.
Abstract: Background: Ocular albinism type 1 (OA1) is an X-linked ocular disorder characterized by a severe reduction in visual acuity, nystagmus, hypopigmentation of the retinal pigmented epithelium, foveal hypoplasia, macromelanosomes in pigmented skin and eye cells, and misrouting of the optical tracts. This disease is primarily caused by mutations in the OA1 gene. Methods: The ophthalmologic phenotype of the patients and their family members was characterized. We screened for mutations in the OA1 gene by direct sequencing of the nine PCR-amplified exons, and for genomic deletions by PCR-amplification of large DNA fragments. Results: We sequenced the nine exons of the OA1 gene in 72 individuals and found ten different mutations in seven unrelated families and three sporadic cases. The ten mutations include an amino acid substitution and a premature stop codon previously reported by our team, and eight previously unidentified mutations: three amino acid substitutions, a duplication, a deletion, an insertion and two splice-site mutations. The use of a novel Taq polymerase enabled us to amplify large genomic fragments covering the OA1 gene. and to detect very likely six distinct large deletions. Furthermore, we were able to confirm that there was no deletion in twenty one patients where no mutation had been found. Conclusion: The identified mutations affect highly conserved amino acids, cause frameshifts or alternative splicing, thus affecting folding of the OA1 G protein coupled receptor, interactions of OA1 with its G protein and/or binding with its ligand.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/132846
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacM&SAna

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