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Genotype–phenotype associations in a large PRPH2‐related retinopathy cohort
Authors:Melissa J. Reeves  Kerry E. Goetz  Bin Guan  Ehsan Ullah  Delphine Blain  Wadih M. Zein  Santa J. Tumminia  Robert B. Hufnagel
Abstract:Molecular variant interpretation lacks disease gene‐specific cohorts for determining variant enrichment in disease versus healthy populations. To address the molecular etiology of retinal degeneration, specifically the PRPH2‐related retinopathies, we reviewed genotype and phenotype information obtained from 187 eyeGENE® participants from 161 families. Clinical details were provided by referring clinicians participating in the eyeGENE® Network. The cohort was sequenced for variants in PRPH2. Variant complementary DNA clusters and cohort frequency were compared to variants in public databases to help us to determine pathogenicity by current American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics/Association for Molecular Pathology interpretation criteria. The most frequent variant was c.828+3A>T, which affected 28 families (17.4%), and 25 of 79 (31.64%) variants were novel. The majority of missense variants clustered in the D2 intracellular loop of the peripherin‐2 protein, constituting a hotspot. Disease enrichment was noted for 23 (29.1%) of the variants. Hotspot and disease‐enrichment evidence modified variant classification for 16.5% of variants. The missense allele p.Arg172Trp was associated with a younger age of onset. To the best of our knowledge, this is the largest patient cohort review of PRPH2‐related retinopathy. Large disease gene‐specific cohorts permit gene modeling for hotspot and disease‐enrichment analysis, providing novel variant classification evidence, including for novel missense variants.
Keywords:clinical variant interpretation  eyeGENE  genotype  phenotype  PRPH2  retinopathy
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