National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Molecular genetic examinations in clinically defined group of patients with syndromic sight and hearing impairment in rare genetic disorders associated with deafblindness in the CR and SR
Čopíková, Jana ; Kremlíková Pourová, Radka (advisor) ; Astl, Jaromír (referee) ; Baxová, Alice (referee)
Deafblindness is a combined impairment of vision and hearing with an incidence of about 1: 8000 children and 1: 5500 adults. The most common genetic causes are the Stickler (STL) and Usher (USH) syndromes. The main goal of this work is to provide an up-to-date overview of STL and USH in the Czech and Slovak Republic (CR and SR), to determine the correlations between the genotype and phenotype in our population and the associated diagnostic criteria. Using sequencing and MLPA we examined 45 patients from 28 families for suspected STL. We found potentially causal variants of STL genes in 39 patients from 22 families. Fifteen different COL2A1 variants (8 being novel) were found in 28 patients from 18 families and 4 novel COL11A1 variants were found in 11 patients from 4 families. We identified the cause of the disease in 79 % of the families. The USH study involved 30 patients from 27 families. The most frequent cause was USH2A pathogenic variants, i.e. 19 variants in 14 families, 9 being novel. Less common were pathogenic variants in MYO7A (6 variants in 3 families, 5 being novel), USH1C and CDH23 (3 variants, 2 being novel, in 2 families both) genes. In 2 families, compound heterozygosity was found for variants in two different USH genes. The deafblindness etiology was clarified for 24 patients from...
Molecular genetic analysis of patients with Usher syndrome
Průšová, Kateřina ; Ďuďáková, Ľubica (advisor) ; Kousal, Bohdan (referee)
The work focuses on molecular genetic testing of patients with Usher syndrome to confirm the diagnosis, to determine the causal cause of the disease and describe new mutations causing Usher syndrome in Czech patients. Usher syndrome is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous disease that is the most common cause of hereditary deafblindness. Based on responsible genes and disease onset is classified into three clinical subtypes. Given the fact that there is currently no specific treatment, there is a need to understand the pathophysiology of this disease and to broaden the spectrum of causal mutations. The theoretical part of the thesis deals with the anatomy of the eye, especially the structure of the retina. Attention is also paid to retinal diseases, such as the progressive loss of vision characteristic for retinitis pigmentosa (RP). RP may occur either as an isolated disorder or also affecting other organs, so-called syndromic RP. Classic syndromic RP includes Usher's syndrome, which the work mainly deals with. The theoretical part of the thesis describes mainly the mechanism of the disease, the functions of individual Usher proteins and the genes that encode these proteins. The haplotype analysis has been previously done for the most common mutations causing Usher's syndrome in Europe Based...

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