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Clinical and genetic variability in children with partial albinism.

Authors :
Campbell, Patrick
Ellingford, Jamie M.
Parry, Neil R. A.
Fletcher, Tracy
Ramsden, Simon C.
Gale, Theodora
Hall, Georgina
Smith, Katherine
Kasperaviciute, Dalia
Thomas, Ellen
Lloyd, I. Chris
Douzgou, Sofia
Clayton-Smith, Jill
Biswas, Susmito
Ashworth, Jane L.
Black, Graeme C. M.
Sergouniotis, Panagiotis I.
Source :
Scientific Reports. 11/12/2019, Vol. 9 Issue 1, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Individuals who have ocular features of albinism and skin pigmentation in keeping with their familial background present a considerable diagnostic challenge. Timely diagnosis through genomic testing can help avert diagnostic odysseys and facilitates accurate genetic counselling and tailored specialist management. Here, we report the clinical and gene panel testing findings in 12 children with presumed ocular albinism. A definitive molecular diagnosis was made in 8/12 probands (67%) and a possible molecular diagnosis was identified in a further 3/12 probands (25%). TYR was the most commonly mutated gene in this cohort (75% of patients, 9/12). A disease-causing TYR haplotype comprised of two common, functional polymorphisms, TYR c.[575 C > A;1205 G > A] p.[(Ser192Tyr);(Arg402Gln)], was found to be particularly prevalent. One participant had GPR143-associated X-linked ocular albinism and another proband had biallelic variants in SLC38A8, a glutamine transporter gene associated with foveal hypoplasia and optic nerve misrouting without pigmentation defects. Intriguingly, 2/12 individuals had a single, rare, likely pathogenic variant in each of TYR and OCA2 – a significant enrichment compared to a control cohort of 4046 individuals from the 100,000 genomes project pilot dataset. Overall, our findings highlight that panel-based genetic testing is a clinically useful test with a high diagnostic yield in children with partial/ocular albinism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
9
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
139632581
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-51768-8