904 resultados para Pentti, Arvo
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Vastine Pentti Moilasen ja Pekka Räihän kirjoitukseen Sosiologia-lehdessä 2/2000
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Kommentti Sosiologia-lehdessä 2000:3 olleeseen kirjoitukseen
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Purpose: Complete achromatopsia is a rare autosomal recessive disease due to CNGA3, CNGB3, GNAT2 and PDE6C mutations. We studied a large consanguineous Tunisian family including twelve individuals.Methods: Ophthalmic evaluation included a full clinical examination, color vision testing, optical coherence tomography and electroretinography. Linkage analysis using microsatellite markers flanking CNGA3, CNGB3, GNAT2 and PDE6C genes was performed. Mutations were screened by direct sequencing.Results: In all affected subjects, acuity ranged from 20/50 to 20/200. Fundus examination was normal except for two patients who had respectively 4 mm and 5 mm diameters of peripheral congenital hypertrophy. Likewise retinal layers exploration by OCT revealed no change in the thickness of the central retina. Color Vision with 100 Hue Farnsworth test described a profound color impairment along all three axes of color vision. The haplotype analysis of GNAT2 markers revealed that all affected offspring were homozygous by descent for the four polymorphic markers. The maximum lod score value, 4.33, confirmed the evidence for linkage to the GNAT2 gene.A homozygous novel nonsense mutation R313X was identified segregating with an identical GNAT2 haplotype in all affected subjects. This mutation could interrupt interaction with photoactivated rhodopsin, resulting in a failure of visual transduction. In fact, ERG showed a clearly abolished photopic b-wave and flicker responses with no residual cone function justifying the severe GNAT2 achromatopsia phenotype.Conclusions: This is the first report of the clinical and genetic investigation of complete achromatopsia in North Africa and of the largest family with recessive achromatopsia involving GNAT2, thus providing a unique opportunity for genotype phenotype correlation for this extremely rare condition.
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Summary: Lake Vähä-Pitkusta : a kettle hole meromixis at Kiikalannummi, SW Finland
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Purpose: Many retinal degenerations result from defective retina-specific gene expressions. Thus, it is important to understand how the expression of a photoreceptor-specific gene is regulated in vivo in order to achieve successful gene therapy. The present study aims to design an AAV2/8 vector that can regulate the transcript level in a physiological manner to replace missing PDE6b in Rd1 and Rd10 mice. In previous studies (Ogieta, et al., 2000), the short 5' flanking sequence of the human PDE6b gene (350 bp) was shown to be photoreceptor-specific in transgenic mice. However, the efficiency and specificity of the 5' flanking region of the human PDE6b was not investigated in the context of gene therapy during retinal degeneration. In this study, two different sequences of the 5' flanking region of the human PDE6b gene were studied as promoter elements and their expression will be tested in wild type and diseased retinas (Rd 10 mice).Methods: Two 5' flanking fragments of the human PDE6b gene: (-93 to +53 (150 bp) and -297 to +53 (350 bp)) were cloned in different plasmids in order to check their expression in vitro and in vivo by constructing an AAV2/8 vector. These elements drove the activity of either luciferase (pGL3 plasmids) or EGFP. jetPEI transfection in Y 79 cells was used to evaluate gene expression through luciferase activity. Constructs encoding EGFP under the control of the two promoters were performed in AAV2.1-93 (or 297)-EGFP plasmids to produce AAV2/8 vectors.Results: When pGL3-93 (150 bp) or pGL3-297 (350 bp) were transfected in the Y-79 cells, the smaller fragment (150 bp) showed higher gene expression compared to the 350 bp element and to the SV40 control, as previously reported. The 350 bp drove similar levels of expression when compared to the SV40 promoter. In view of these results, the fragments (150 bp or 350 bp) were integrated into the AAV2.1-EGFP plasmid to produce AAV2/8 vector, and we are currently evaluating the efficiency and specificity of the produced constructs in vivo in normal and diseased retinas.Conclusions: Comparisons of these vectors with vectors bearing ubiquitous promoters should reveal which construct is the most suitable to drive efficient and specific gene expression in diseased retinas in order to restore a normal function on the long term.
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Komentti Pertti Tötön kirjoitukseen Sosiologia-lehdessä 2/2000
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Purpose: Retinitis pigmentosa (RP; MIM 268000) is a hereditary disease characterized by poor night vision and progressive loss of photoreceptors, eventually leading to blindness. This degenerative process primarily affects peripheral vision due to the loss of rods. Autosomal recessive RP (arRP) is clinically and genetically heterogeneous. It has been associated with mutations in different genes, including CRB1 (Crumbs homolog 1). The aim of this study was to determine the causative gene in a Tunisian patient with arRP born to non consanguineous parents.Methods: Four accessible family members were included. They underwent full ophthalmic examination with best corrected Snellen visual acuity, fundus photography and fluoroangiography. Haplotype analyses were used to test linkage in the family to 20 arRP loci, including ABCA4, LRAT, USH2A, RP29, CERKL, CNGA1, CNGB1, CRB1, EYS, RP28, MERTK, NR2E3, PDE6A, PDE6B, RGR, RHO, RLBP1, TULP1. All exons and intron-exon junctions of candidate genes not excluded by haplotype analysis were PCR amplified and directly sequenced.Results: A 39 aged affected member was individualized. Best corrected visual acuity was OR: 20/63, OS: 20/80. Visual loss began at the third decade. Funduscopic examination and FA revealed typical advanced RP changes with bone spicule-shaped pigment deposits in the posterior pole and the mild periphery along with retinal atrophy, narrowing of the vessels and waxy optic discs. Haplotypes analysis revealed homozygosity with microsatellites markers D1S412 and D1S413 on chromosome 1q31.3. These markers flanked the CRB1 gene. Our results excluded linkage of all the other arRP loci/ genes tested. Sequencing of the 12 coding exons and splice sites of CRB1 gene disclosed a homozygous missense mutation in exon 7 at nucleotide c.(2291 G>A), resulting in an Arg to Hist substitution (p.R764H).Conclusions: R764H is a novel mutation associated with CRB1-related arRP. Previously, an R764C mutation was observed. Extending the mutation spectrum of CRB1 with additional families is important for genotype-phenotype correlations.