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Multicenter Study
. 2017 Jan 1;58(1):394-403.
doi: 10.1167/iovs.16-19936.

Mutation Spectrum of the ABCA4 Gene in 335 Stargardt Disease Patients From a Multicenter German Cohort-Impact of Selected Deep Intronic Variants and Common SNPs

Affiliations
Multicenter Study

Mutation Spectrum of the ABCA4 Gene in 335 Stargardt Disease Patients From a Multicenter German Cohort-Impact of Selected Deep Intronic Variants and Common SNPs

Heidi L Schulz et al. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. .

Abstract

Purpose: Stargardt disease (STGD1) is an autosomal recessive retinopathy, caused by mutations in the retina-specific ATP-binding cassette transporter (ABCA4) gene. To establish the mutational spectrum and to assess effects of selected deep intronic and common genetic variants on disease, we performed a comprehensive sequence analysis in a large cohort of German STGD1 patients.

Methods: DNA samples of 335 STGD1 patients were analyzed for ABCA4 mutations in its 50 coding exons and adjacent intronic sequences by resequencing array technology or next generation sequencing (NGS). Parts of intron 30 and 36 were screened by Sanger chain-terminating dideoxynucleotide sequencing. An in vitro splicing assay was used to test selected variants for their splicing behavior. By logistic regression analysis we assessed the association of common ABCA4 alleles while a multivariate logistic regression model calculated a genetic risk score (GRS).

Results: Our analysis identified 148 pathogenic or likely pathogenic mutations, of which 48 constitute so far unpublished ABCA4-associated disease alleles. Four rare deep intronic variants were found once in 472 alleles analyzed. In addition, we identified six risk-modulating common variants. Genetic risk score estimates suggest that defined common ABCA4 variants influence disease risk in carriers of a single pathogenic ABCA4 allele.

Conclusions: Our study adds to the mutational spectrum of the ABCA4 gene. Moreover, in our cohort, deep intronic variants in intron 30 and 36 likely play no or only a minor role in disease pathology. Of note, our findings demonstrate a possible modifying effect of common sequence variants on ABCA4-associated disease.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Frequency of common ABCA4 variants in patients with Stargardt disease and European non-Finnish controls. Six variants that were found to be significantly enriched in either patients or controls are framed.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Genetic risk score (GRS) for patients and controls stratified according to the number of ABCA4 mutations or disease status. An alpha estimate of −1.0503 was used to center the GRS on zero for the controls. Red bars represent the mean GRS and confidence intervals.

References

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