Whole Exome Sequencing of 20 Spanish Families: Candidate Genes for Non-Syndromic Pediatric Cataracts

Author:

Rodríguez-Solana Patricia1ORCID,Arruti Natalia23ORCID,Nieves-Moreno María23ORCID,Mena Rocío14ORCID,Rodríguez-Jiménez Carmen1,Guerrero-Carretero Marta2,Acal Juan Carlos2,Blasco Joana2,Peralta Jesús M.2,Del Pozo Ángela45,Montaño Victoria E. F.14,Dios-Blázquez Lucía De5,Fernández-Alcalde Celia2ORCID,González-Atienza Carmen1,Sánchez-Cazorla Eloísa1,Gómez-Cano María de Los Ángeles46,Delgado-Mora Luna46,Noval Susana23ORCID,Vallespín Elena134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Molecular Ophthalmology Section, Institute of Medical and Molecular Genetics (INGEMM), IdiPaz, La Paz University Hospital, 28046 Madrid, Spain

2. Department of Pediatric Ophthalmology, IdiPaz, La Paz University Hospital, 28046 Madrid, Spain

3. European Reference Network on Eye Diseases (ERN-EYE), La Paz University Hospital, 28046 Madrid, Spain

4. Biomedical Research Center in the Rare Diseases Network (CIBERER), Carlos II Health Institute (ISCIII), 28029 Madrid, Spain

5. Clinical Bioinformatics Section, Institute of Medical and Molecular Genetics (INGEMM), IdiPaz, CIBERER, La Paz University Hospital, 28046 Madrid, Spain

6. Clinical Genetics Section, Institute of Medical and Molecular Genetics (INGEMM), IdiPaz, CIBERER, La Paz University Hospital, 28046 Madrid, Spain

Abstract

Non-syndromic pediatric cataracts are defined as opacification of the crystalline lens that occurs during the first years of life without affecting other organs. Given that this disease is one of the most frequent causes of reversible blindness in childhood, the main objective of this study was to propose new responsible gene candidates that would allow a more targeted genetic approach and expand our genetic knowledge about the disease. We present a whole exome sequencing (WES) study of 20 Spanish families with non-syndromic pediatric cataracts and a previous negative result on an ophthalmology next-generation sequencing panel. After ophthalmological evaluation and collection of peripheral blood samples from these families, WES was performed. We were able to reach a genetic diagnosis in 10% of the families analyzed and found genes that could cause pediatric cataracts in 35% of the cohort. Of the variants found, 18.2% were classified as pathogenic, 9% as likely pathogenic, and 72.8% as variants of uncertain significance. However, we did not find conclusive results in 55% of the families studied, which suggests further studies are needed. The results of this WES study allow us to propose LONP1, ACACA, TRPM1, CLIC5, HSPE1, ODF1, PIKFYVE, and CHMP4A as potential candidates to further investigate for their role in pediatric cataracts, and AQP5 and locus 2q37 as causal genes.

Funder

ONCE

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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5. (2023, January 02). BioRender. Available online: https://biorender.com/.

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