REAL

Missing Heritability in Albinism: Deep Characterization of a Hungarian Albinism Cohort Raises the Possibility of the Digenic Genetic Background of the Disease

Nagy, Nikoletta and Pál, Margit and Kun, József and Gálik, Bence and Urbán, Péter and Medvecz, Márta and Fabos, Beata and Neller, Alexandra and Abdolreza, Aliasgari and Danis, Judit and Szabó, Viktória and Yang, Zhuo and Fenske, Stefanie and Biel, Martin and Gyenesei, Attila and Ádám, Éva and Széll, Márta (2024) Missing Heritability in Albinism: Deep Characterization of a Hungarian Albinism Cohort Raises the Possibility of the Digenic Genetic Background of the Disease. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, 25 (2). No.-1271. ISSN 1661-6596

[img]
Preview
Text
NagyN.MissingHeritability_szc._2024IntJ.MolSci.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

Download (1MB) | Preview

Abstract

Albinism is characterized by a variable degree of hypopigmentation affecting the skin and the hair, and causing ophthalmologic abnormalities. Its oculocutaneous, ocular and syndromic forms follow an autosomal or X-linked recessive mode of inheritance, and 22 disease-causing genes are implicated in their development. Our aim was to clarify the genetic background of a Hungarian albinism cohort. Using a 22-gene albinism panel, the genetic background of 11 of the 17 Hungarian patients was elucidated. In patients with unidentified genetic backgrounds (n = 6), whole exome sequencing was performed. Our investigations revealed a novel, previously unreported rare variant (N687S) of the two-pore channel two gene (TPCN2). The N687S variant of the encoded TPC2 protein is carried by a 15-year-old Hungarian male albinism patient and his clinically unaffected mother. Our segregational analysis and in vitro functional experiments suggest that the detected novel rare TPCN2 variant alone is not a disease-causing variant in albinism. Deep genetic analyses of the family revealed that the patient also carries a phenotype-modifying R305W variant of the OCA2 protein, and he is the only family member harboring this genotype. Our results raise the possibility that this digenic combination might contribute to the observed differences between the patient and the mother, and found the genetic background of the disease in his case.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: albinism; missing heritability; digenic inheritance; TPCN2 gene
Subjects: R Medicine / orvostudomány > RL Dermatology / bőrgyógyászat
SWORD Depositor: MTMT SWORD
Depositing User: MTMT SWORD
Date Deposited: 08 Sep 2025 08:50
Last Modified: 08 Sep 2025 08:50
URI: https://real.mtak.hu/id/eprint/223733

Actions (login required)

Edit Item Edit Item