Journal
FRONTIERS IN GENETICS
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2022.858556
Keywords
retinitis pigmentosa; retinal dystrophies; genetics; homozygosity; gene mapping; mutations; sequencing
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Funding
- Hyderabad Eye Research Foundation [BT/PR32404/MED/30/2136/2019]
- Department of Biotechnology, Government of India
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This review discusses the genetic studies on retinitis pigmentosa in India and neighboring South Asian countries. These populations have been understudied in this aspect, but efforts have been made to identify the genetic characteristics of RP in Indian families and large extended families from Pakistan. The extreme clinical and genetic heterogeneity of RP poses challenges in identifying associated genes and translating research findings for better disease management.
Retinitis pigmentosa is one of the major forms of inherited retinal dystrophy transmitted in all Mendelian and non-Mendelian forms of inheritance. It involves the loss of retinal photoreceptor cells with severe loss of vision or blindness within the first 2 decades of life. RP occurs at a relatively high prevalence in India and is often associated with consanguinity in certain South Asian communities where this practice is customary. This review describes the studies that have been published with regard to genetics of retinitis pigmentosa in India and neighboring South Asian countries. These populations have been understudied in these aspects although to a variable degree from one country to another. Genetic studies on RP in India have been carried out with a range of methods aimed at detecting specific mutations, to screening of candidate genes or selected genomic regions, homozygosity mapping to whole genome sequencing. These efforts have led to a molecular genetic characterization of RP in Indian families. Similar studies on large extended families from Pakistan have provided insight into several novel genes underlying the pathogenesis of these diseases. The extreme degree of clinical and genetic heterogeneity of RP renders it challenging to identify the associated genes in these populations, and to translate the research output towards better management of the disease, as there are no unifying genetic features that are characteristic of any population so far.
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