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Cyp1b1 Mutation Profile of Iranian Primary Congenital Glaucoma Patients and Associated Haplotypes Publisher Pubmed



Chitsazian F1, 2 ; Tusi BK1, 2 ; Elahi E1, 2, 3 ; Saroei HA4 ; Sanati MH1 ; Yazdani S5 ; Pakravan M5 ; Nilforooshan N6 ; Eslami Y4 ; Zare Mehrjerdi MA4 ; Zareei R4 ; Jabbarvand M4 ; Abdolahi A4 ; Lasheyee AR4 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Chitsazian F1, 2
  2. Tusi BK1, 2
  3. Elahi E1, 2, 3
  4. Saroei HA4
  5. Sanati MH1
  6. Yazdani S5
  7. Pakravan M5
  8. Nilforooshan N6
  9. Eslami Y4
  10. Zare Mehrjerdi MA4
  11. Zareei R4
  12. Jabbarvand M4
  13. Abdolahi A4
  14. Lasheyee AR4
  15. Etemadi A4
  16. Bayat B1
  17. Sadeghi M1, 3
  18. Banoei MM1
  19. Ghafarzadeh B7
  20. Rohani MR7
  21. Rismanchian A8
  22. Thorstenson Y9
  23. Sarfarazi M10

Source: Journal of Molecular Diagnostics Published:2007


Abstract

The mutation spectrum of CYP1B1 among 104 primary congenital glaucoma patients of the genetically heterogeneous Iranian population was investigated by sequencing. We also determined intragenic single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) haplotypes associated with the mutations and compared these with haplotypes of other populations. Finally, the frequency distribution of the haplotypes was compared among primary congenital glaucoma patients with and without CYP1B1 mutations and normal controls. Genotype classification of six high-frequency SNPs was performed using the PHASE 2.0 software. CYP1B1 mutations in the Iranian patients were very heterogeneous. Nineteen nonconservative mutations associated with disease, and 10 variations not associated with disease were identified. Ten mutations and three variations not associated with disease were novel. The 13 novel variations make a notable contribution to the ∼70 known vacations in the gene. CYP1B1 mutations were identified in 70% of the patients. The four most common mutations were G61E, R368H, R390H, and R469W, which together constituted 76.2% of the CYP1B1 mutated alleles found. Six unique core SNP haplotypes were identified, four of which were common to the patients with and without CYP1B1 mutations and controls studied. Three SNP blocks determined the haplotypes. Comparison of haplotypes with those of other populations suggests a common origin for many of the mutations. Copyright © American Society for Investigative Pathology and the Association for Molecular Pathology.
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