Neurological diseases affect 3-5% of children and, apart from cardiovascular diseases and cancer, represent the most prominent cause of morbidity and mortality in adults and particularly in the aged population… Click to show full abstract
Neurological diseases affect 3-5% of children and, apart from cardiovascular diseases and cancer, represent the most prominent cause of morbidity and mortality in adults and particularly in the aged population of western Europe. Neuromuscular disorders are a subgroup of neurological diseases and often have a genetic origin, which leads to familial clustering. Despite the enormous progress in the analysis of the genome, such as by sequence analysis of coding regions of deoxyribonucleic acid or even the entire deoxyribonucleic acid sequence, in approximately 50% of the patients suffering from rare forms of neurological diseases the genetic cause remains unsolved. The reasons for this limited detection rate are presented in this article. If a treatment concept is available, under certain conditions this can have an impact on the adequate and early treatment of these patients. Considering neuromuscular disorders as a paradigm, this article reports on the advantages of the inclusion of next generation sequencing analysis-based DNA investigations as an omics technology (genomics) and the advantage of the integration with protein analyses (proteomics). A special focus is on the combination of genomics and proteomics in the sense of a proteogenomic approach in the diagnostics and research of these diseases. Along this line, this article presents a proteogenomic approach in the context of a multidisciplinary project aiming towards improved diagnostic work-up and future treatment of patients with neuromuscular diseases; "NMD-GPS: gene and protein signatures as a global positioning system in patients suffering from neuromuscular diseases".
               
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