1. Academic Validation
  2. DNA variations in oculocutaneous albinism: an updated mutation list and current outstanding issues in molecular diagnostics

DNA variations in oculocutaneous albinism: an updated mutation list and current outstanding issues in molecular diagnostics

  • Hum Mutat. 2013 Jun;34(6):827-35. doi: 10.1002/humu.22315.
Dimitre R Simeonov 1 Xinjing Wang Chen Wang Yuri Sergeev Monika Dolinska Matthew Bower Roxanne Fischer David Winer Genia Dubrovsky Joan Z Balog Marjan Huizing Rachel Hart Wadih M Zein William A Gahl Brian P Brooks David R Adams
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Abstract

Oculocutaneous albinism (OCA) is a rare genetic disorder of melanin synthesis that results in hypopigmented hair, skin, and eyes. There are four types of OCA caused by mutations in TYR (OCA-1), OCA2 (OCA-2), TYRP1 (OCA-3), or SLC45A2 (OCA-4). Here we report 22 novel mutations in the OCA genes; 14 from a cohort of 61 patients seen as part of the NIH OCA Natural History Study and eight from a prior study at the University of Minnesota. We also include a comprehensive list of almost 600 previously reported OCA mutations along with ethnicity information, carrier frequencies, and in silico pathogenicity predictions as a supplement. In addition to discussing the clinical and molecular features of OCA, we address the cases of apparent missing heritability. In our cohort, 26% of patients did not have two mutations in a single OCA gene. We demonstrate the utility of multiple detection methods to reveal mutations missed by Sanger Sequencing. Finally, we review the TYR p.R402Q temperature-sensitive variant and confirm its association with cases of albinism with only one identifiable TYR mutation.

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