Koenekoop Robert K, Lopez Irma, den Hollander Anneke I, Allikmets Rando, Cremers Frans P M
McGill Ocular Genetics Center, McGill University Health Center, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Clin Exp Ophthalmol. 2007 Jul;35(5):473-85. doi: 10.1111/j.1442-9071.2007.01534.x.
Human retinal dystrophies have unparalleled genetic and clinical diversity and are currently linked to more than 185 genetic loci. Genotyping is a crucial exercise, as human gene-specific clinical trials to study photoreceptor rescue are on their way. Testing confirms the diagnosis at the molecular level and allows for a more precise prognosis of the possible future clinical evolution. As treatments are gene-specific and the 'window of opportunity' is time-sensitive; accurate, rapid and cost-effective genetic testing will play an ever-increasing crucial role. The gold standard is sequencing but is fraught with excessive costs, time, manpower issues and finding non-pathogenic variants. Therefore, no centre offers testing of all currently 132 known genes. Several new micro-array technologies have emerged recently, that offer rapid, cost-effective and accurate genotyping. The new disease chips from Asper Ophthalmics (for Stargardt dystrophy, Leber congenital amaurosis [LCA], Usher syndromes and retinitis pigmentosa) offer an excellent first pass opportunity. All known mutations are placed on the chip and in 4 h a patient's DNA is screened. Identification rates (identifying at least one disease-associated mutation) are currently approximately 70% (Stargardt), approximately 60-70% (LCA) and approximately 45% (Usher syndrome subtype 1). This may be combined with genotype-phenotype correlations that suggest the causal gene from the clinical appearance (e.g. preserved para-arteriolar retinal pigment epithelium suggests the involvement of the CRB1 gene in LCA). As approximately 50% of the retinal dystrophy genes still await discovery, these technologies will improve dramatically as additional novel mutations are added. Genetic testing will then become standard practice to complement the ophthalmic evaluation.
人类视网膜营养不良具有无与伦比的遗传和临床多样性,目前已与185多个基因位点相关联。基因分型是一项至关重要的工作,因为针对光感受器拯救的人类基因特异性临床试验正在进行中。检测可在分子水平上确诊,并能对未来可能的临床进展做出更精确的预后判断。由于治疗是基因特异性的,且“机会窗口”对时间敏感,准确、快速且经济高效的基因检测将发挥越来越关键的作用。金标准是测序,但存在成本过高、耗时、人力问题以及发现非致病变异等问题。因此,没有哪个中心能对目前已知的132个基因进行全部检测。最近出现了几种新的微阵列技术,它们能提供快速、经济高效且准确的基因分型。阿斯珀眼科公司的新型疾病芯片(用于斯特格黄斑营养不良、莱伯先天性黑矇[LCA]、Usher综合征和视网膜色素变性)提供了一个绝佳的初步筛查机会。所有已知突变都被放置在芯片上,4小时内就能对患者的DNA进行筛查。目前的识别率(识别至少一种与疾病相关的突变)约为70%(斯特格黄斑营养不良)、约60 - 70%(LCA)和约45%(Usher综合征1型亚型)。这可以与基因型 - 表型相关性相结合,从临床症状推测致病基因(例如,保留的动脉旁视网膜色素上皮提示CRB1基因与LCA有关)。由于约50%的视网膜营养不良基因仍有待发现,随着更多新突变的加入,这些技术将得到显著改进。届时,基因检测将成为补充眼科评估的标准做法。