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Short-read next-generation sequencing has revolutionized our ability to identify variants underlying inherited diseases; however, it does not allow the phasing of variants to clarify their diagnostic interpretation. The advent of widespread, increasingly accurate long-read sequencing has opened up new applications not currently available through short-read next-generation sequencing. One such use is the ability to phase variants to clarify their diagnostic interpretation and to investigate the increasingly prevalent role of cis-acting variants in the pathogenesis of the inherited disease, so-called complex alleles. Complex alleles are becoming an increasingly prevalent part of the study of genes associated with inherited diseases, for example, in ABCA4-related diseases. We sought to establish a cost-effective method to phase contiguous segments of the 130-kb ABCA4 locus by long-read sequencing of overlapping amplification products. Using the comprehensively characterized CEPH sample, NA12878, we verified the accuracy and robustness of our assay. However, in-field assessment of its utility using clinical test cases was hampered by the paucity and distribution of identified variants and by PCR chimerism, particularly where the number of PCR cycles was high. Despite this, we were able to construct robust phase blocks of up to 94.9 kb, representing 73% of the ABCA4 locus. We conclude that, although haplotype analysis of variants located within discrete amplification products was robust and informative, the stitching together of larger phase blocks using overlapping single-molecule reads remained practically challenging.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.labinv.2023.100160 | DOI Listing |
Transl Vis Sci Technol
August 2025
Center for Hereditary Retinal Degenerations, Scheie Eye Institute, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Purpose: Key outcome measures for inherited retinal degenerations (IRDs) are derived from the termination point of the inner and outer segment junction (IS/OS, or ellipsoid zone (EZ)) signal on optical coherence tomography (OCT), which demarcates the emergence of photoreceptor outer segment (OS) abnormalities. However, the termination point is not always abrupt and can be ambiguous. This study aimed to characterize OS disease at each retinal location.
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November 2024
Department of Ophthalmology, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.
Ophthalmol Sci
July 2024
Centre of Ophthalmology and Visual Science (incorporating Lions Eye Institute), The University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
Purpose: To evaluate progression rate estimation in long-term Stargardt disease microperimetry data by accounting for floor effect.
Design: Cohort study.
Subjects: Thirty-seven subjects (23 females, 14 males) with biallelic ABCA4 pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants and more than >2 years of longitudinal microperimetry data.
Genome Biol
May 2024
Department of Biomolecular Medicine, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Background: Vision depends on the interplay between photoreceptor cells of the neural retina and the underlying retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Most genes involved in inherited retinal diseases display specific spatiotemporal expression within these interconnected retinal components through the local recruitment of cis-regulatory elements (CREs) in 3D nuclear space.
Results: To understand the role of differential chromatin architecture in establishing tissue-specific expression at inherited retinal disease loci, we mapped genome-wide chromatin interactions using in situ Hi-C and H3K4me3 HiChIP on neural retina and RPE/choroid from human adult donor eyes.
Heliyon
May 2024
Molecular Testing Laboratory, Department of Medical Laboratory Technology, Faculty of Health Sciences, Beirut Arab University, Beirut, Lebanon.
Variants in () have been linked to several forms of inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) besides the classically defined Stargardt disease (STGD), known collectively as retinopathies. is a sizable locus harboring 50 exons; thus, its analysis has revealed over 2,400 variants described, of which more than 2,000 are causal. Due to the clinical and genetic heterogeneity, diagnosing retinopathies is challenging.
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