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Yi Yu, Michael P. Triebwasser, Edwin K. S. Wong, Elizabeth C. Schramm, Brett Thomas, Robyn Reynolds, Elaine R. Mardis, John P. Atkinson, Mark Daly, Soumya Raychaudhuri, David Kavanagh, Johanna M. Seddon, Whole-exome sequencing identifies rare, functional CFH variants in families with macular degeneration, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 23, Issue 19, 1 October 2014, Pages 5283–5293, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddu226
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We sequenced the whole exome of 35 cases and 7 controls from 9 age-related macular degeneration (AMD) families in whom known common genetic risk alleles could not explain their high disease burden and/or their early-onset advanced disease. Two families harbored novel rare mutations in CFH (R53C and D90G). R53C segregates perfectly with AMD in 11 cases (heterozygous) and 1 elderly control (reference allele) (LOD = 5.07, P = 6.7 × 10−7). In an independent cohort, 4 out of 1676 cases but none of the 745 examined controls or 4300 NHBLI Exome Sequencing Project (ESP) samples carried the R53C mutation (P = 0.0039). In another family of six siblings, D90G similarly segregated with AMD in five cases and one control (LOD = 1.22, P = 0.009). No other sample in our large cohort or the ESP had this mutation. Functional studies demonstrated that R53C decreased the ability of FH to perform decay accelerating activity. D90G exhibited a decrease in cofactor-mediated inactivation. Both of these changes would lead to a loss of regulatory activity, resulting in excessive alternative pathway activation. This study represents an initial application of the whole-exome strategy to families with early-onset AMD. It successfully identified high impact alleles leading to clearer functional insight into AMD etiopathogenesis.